Week 12 Cheatsheet — Shear Stress & Strain + Stress-Strain Curve
//body
← Back to weekHow this week breaks down
Two big blocks. Skim this once, then revise from the in-depth note.
| Block | What you do |
|---|---|
| Stress-strain curve | Identify yield / UTS / fracture; compute toughness and modulus of resilience; understand strain hardening (unload parallel, unchanged). |
| Shear | Cut the body, identify the shear plane, compute . Size connections via . Use for strain and for stiffness. |
Every shear formula mirrors an axial one — see the analogy below.
1 — Stress-strain curve
Key points on the curve
| Symbol | Name | What it is |
|---|---|---|
| Yield stress | Elastic → plastic transition | |
| Ultimate tensile stress | Peak of the curve | |
| Fracture stress | Stress at the break | |
| Proportional limit | — | Highest stress where |
| Elastic limit | — | Highest stress with no permanent set |
For most engineering metals the proportional limit, elastic limit and yield point essentially coincide at (slide 3).
Energies under the curve
For a linear elastic region:
| Material class | Toughness behaviour |
|---|---|
| Ceramics | Small (elastic only, brittle) |
| Metals | Large (elastic + extensive plastic) |
| Polymers | Often very small |
Strain hardening
Unload from the plastic region → return along a line parallel to the original elastic slope. After reloading, the new effective yield stress is higher but is unchanged.
| Before / after | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before | MPa | MJ/m³ | GPa | |
| After | MPa | MJ/m³ | GPa |
2 — Direct shear
The core formula
with tangent to the cut plane and acting in the same direction as .
Single vs double shear
| Configuration | Cut planes | Internal shear per plane |
|---|---|---|
| Single shear | 1 | |
| Double shear | 2 |
Always draw the FBD of the fastener and count the cut planes.
Sizing simple connections
Rod glued/embedded over length (cylindrical shear surface, ):
Disk being punched through a hole (cylindrical edge sheared, height , circumference ):
Same formula structure — both shear surfaces are cylindrical edges of area .
3 — Shear strain
where is the deformed angle between two originally perpendicular lines. Units: radians.
Small-strain approximations (for )
So for a top plate displaced over height :
Common configurations
| Setup | contribution at the corner |
|---|---|
| Top edge shifts horizontally (height ) | |
| Side edge shifts vertically (length ) | |
| Both edges rotate (parallelogram) | sum of both rotations |
| Normal compression/extension on one edge | not a shear contribution (that’s ) |
4 — Shear modulus and the -- relation
Hooke’s law in shear:
For an isotropic linear-elastic material:
Handbook values (slide 20)
| Material | (GPa) | (GPa) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aluminium | 70 | 25 | 0.33 |
| Brass | 97 | 37 | 0.34 |
| Copper | 110 | 46 | 0.34 |
| Nickel | 207 | 76 | 0.31 |
| Steel | 207 | 83 | 0.30 |
| Titanium | 107 | 45 | 0.34 |
| Tungsten | 407 | 160 | 0.28 |
(Useful consistency check: plug and into and verify against the table.)
5 — Axial ↔ shear analogy
| Quantity | Axial | Shear |
|---|---|---|
| Stress | ||
| Strain | (small) | |
| Hooke’s law | ||
| Elastic modulus | ||
| Energy density |
Same machinery, different direction of the internal force.
Common mistakes
- Counting cut planes wrong. Single vs double shear changes by a factor of 2. Always draw the FBD.
- Wrong shear area. For a punched disk, the shear surface is the cylindrical edge , not the disk face .
- Confusing toughness and resilience. Toughness = whole area (to fracture). Resilience = elastic triangle only (to ).
- Strain hardening misconception. does not change — only the new effective yield strength does.
- Angle units. must be in radians, never degrees, for and small-angle approximations.
- Plugging into the sizing formula. Always design with .
- Mistaking normal strain for shear. A vertical compression on a vertical edge is , not .
- Resilience/toughness units. , not J.
Key formulas
For the why and worked examples, see the in-depth note.
//quiz
Easy → hard. Reshuffles every visit.
Average direct shear stress is...