aaronsmith0402
Mechanical
- Aug 13, 2024
- 2
thread727-349560
I didn't like how this question/thread ended and I'm sure there are some engineers out there who are in the same boat.
The question seems to be: Can I use Von-mises failure criteria against and ultimate strength requirement. (von-mises is less than a factor of safety and ultimate tensile strength of a material)
The answer is: Depends on the material that you have? I assume we are taking metals here. (Aluminum, steel, etc...)
You need to determine is the material is brittle or ductile. If it's brittle, the material usually doesn't have a yield strength so von-mises would not be appropriate. You would use a Modified Mohr failure criterion (or others). If it's ductile, the material does have a yield strength and von-mises can be used. Usually if the elongation of a material is less than 5%, then it is brittle. (Shigley)
There are exceptions such as components, COTS parts such as lugs or rivets, that have working limits (ultimate loads) from manufacturer data. Even if these components are ductile, you would just use loading criteria.
Anyway, back to the question.
If you have a ductile material, can we compare von-mises to ultimate criteria? Yes.
Maximum principal stress theory is usually used for brittle materials. However, I'd recommend Modified Mohr.
The ultimate criteria, is the tensile strength of the material. (the point before necking occurs and strength decreases) - Refer to ductile stress strain curve. The region between yield and ultimate is called work hardening. The strength of the material increases with increase in plastic working. Usually, we assume isotropic work hardening which strength increases uniformly in all directions. Referring back to von-mises, the yield locus gets stretched out uniformly all around and is a function of plastic strain and the tangent modulus. The increase in yield locus equates to the ultimate strength. Therefore, the von-mises criteria should still be used.
Note: Honestly, Hill's criterion (which stems from von-mises) should be used if you are designing in the ultimate region, it pretty pointless for ductile materials since we usually design to yield. Here is a link to a good paper on the history of each failure criteria and type of hardening.
Note: If you are conducting non-linear analysis with ANSYS. You should take a close look if you want to consider isotropic hardening (Bilinear Isotropic Hardening) or kinematic hardening (Multi-linear isotropic hardening). Then please watch this video and read this thread for how ANSYS calculates von-mises stress (yield surface) in the plastic region.
I didn't like how this question/thread ended and I'm sure there are some engineers out there who are in the same boat.
The question seems to be: Can I use Von-mises failure criteria against and ultimate strength requirement. (von-mises is less than a factor of safety and ultimate tensile strength of a material)
The answer is: Depends on the material that you have? I assume we are taking metals here. (Aluminum, steel, etc...)
You need to determine is the material is brittle or ductile. If it's brittle, the material usually doesn't have a yield strength so von-mises would not be appropriate. You would use a Modified Mohr failure criterion (or others). If it's ductile, the material does have a yield strength and von-mises can be used. Usually if the elongation of a material is less than 5%, then it is brittle. (Shigley)
There are exceptions such as components, COTS parts such as lugs or rivets, that have working limits (ultimate loads) from manufacturer data. Even if these components are ductile, you would just use loading criteria.
Anyway, back to the question.
If you have a ductile material, can we compare von-mises to ultimate criteria? Yes.
Maximum principal stress theory is usually used for brittle materials. However, I'd recommend Modified Mohr.
The ultimate criteria, is the tensile strength of the material. (the point before necking occurs and strength decreases) - Refer to ductile stress strain curve. The region between yield and ultimate is called work hardening. The strength of the material increases with increase in plastic working. Usually, we assume isotropic work hardening which strength increases uniformly in all directions. Referring back to von-mises, the yield locus gets stretched out uniformly all around and is a function of plastic strain and the tangent modulus. The increase in yield locus equates to the ultimate strength. Therefore, the von-mises criteria should still be used.
Note: Honestly, Hill's criterion (which stems from von-mises) should be used if you are designing in the ultimate region, it pretty pointless for ductile materials since we usually design to yield. Here is a link to a good paper on the history of each failure criteria and type of hardening.
Note: If you are conducting non-linear analysis with ANSYS. You should take a close look if you want to consider isotropic hardening (Bilinear Isotropic Hardening) or kinematic hardening (Multi-linear isotropic hardening). Then please watch this video and read this thread for how ANSYS calculates von-mises stress (yield surface) in the plastic region.