EBK MANUFACTURING ENGINEERING & TECHNOL
7th Edition
ISBN: 9780100793439
Author: KALPAKJIAN
Publisher: YUZU
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Textbook Question
Chapter 1, Problem 59SDP
Give examples in which anisotropy is scale dependent. For example, a wire rope can contain annealed wires that are isotropic on a microscopic scale, but the rope as a whole is anisotropic.
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A material has a linear elastic perfectly plastic stress-strain. A cylindrical specimen of that material having an initial length of 35 mm and a tadius of 7 mm is pulled until it elongates 0.8mm.
a. Calculate the stain and the corresponding stress at that elongation value.
b. Afterward, the specimen is released to zero stress level, how does the final length of the specimen compare with its original length? How much plastic deformation remains if it exists?
Example 2. A cylindrical bar of 40 mm diameter and 1 m
length is subjected to a tensile test. Its longitudinal
strain is 6 times that of its lateral strain. If the
modulus of elasticity is 2 x 105 N/mm², then its
modulus of rigidity will be
2
Chapter 1 Solutions
EBK MANUFACTURING ENGINEERING & TECHNOL
Ch. 1 - What is the difference between an atom and a...Ch. 1 - Prob. 2RQCh. 1 - Prob. 3RQCh. 1 - Prob. 4RQCh. 1 - Define anisotropy. What is its significance?Ch. 1 - What effects does recrystallization have on the...Ch. 1 - What is strain hardening, and what effects does it...Ch. 1 - Explain what is meant by structure-sensitive and...Ch. 1 - Prob. 9RQCh. 1 - What influence does grain size have on the...
Ch. 1 - What is the relationship between the nucleation...Ch. 1 - What is a slip system, and what is its...Ch. 1 - Explain the difference between recovery and...Ch. 1 - What is hot shortness, and what is its...Ch. 1 - Explain the advantages and limitations of cold,...Ch. 1 - Describe what the orange peel effect is. Explain...Ch. 1 - Some metals, such as lead, do not become stronger...Ch. 1 - Describe the difference between preferred...Ch. 1 - Differentiate between stress relaxation and stress...Ch. 1 - What is twinning? How does it differ from slip?Ch. 1 - Prob. 21QLPCh. 1 - What is the significance of the fact that some...Ch. 1 - Is it possible for two pieces of the same metal to...Ch. 1 - Prob. 24QLPCh. 1 - A cold-worked piece of metal has been...Ch. 1 - What materials and structures can you think of...Ch. 1 - Two parts have been made of the same material, but...Ch. 1 - Do you think it might be important to know whether...Ch. 1 - Explain why the strength of a polycrystalline...Ch. 1 - Describe the technique you would use to reduce the...Ch. 1 - What is the significance of the fact that such...Ch. 1 - Prob. 32QLPCh. 1 - It has been noted that the more a metal has been...Ch. 1 - Is it possible to cold work a metal at...Ch. 1 - Comment on your observations regarding Fig. 1.14.Ch. 1 - Is it possible for a metal to be completely...Ch. 1 - Prob. 37QTPCh. 1 - Prob. 38QTPCh. 1 - Plot the data given in Table 1.1 in terms of...Ch. 1 - A strip of metal is reduced from 30 mm in...Ch. 1 - Prob. 41QTPCh. 1 - How many grains are there on the surface of the...Ch. 1 - Prob. 43QTPCh. 1 - Prob. 44QTPCh. 1 - Prob. 45QTPCh. 1 - A technician determines that the grain size of a...Ch. 1 - If the diameter of the aluminum atom is 0.28 nm,...Ch. 1 - The following data are obtained in tension tests...Ch. 1 - Prob. 50QTPCh. 1 - Prob. 51QTPCh. 1 - Prob. 52QTPCh. 1 - Same as Prob. 1.39, but ASTM no. versus...Ch. 1 - By stretching a thin strip of polished metal, as...Ch. 1 - Draw some analogies to mechanical fiberingfor...Ch. 1 - Draw some analogies to the phenomenon of hot...Ch. 1 - Take a deck of playing cards, place a rubber band...Ch. 1 - Give examples in which anisotropy is scale...Ch. 1 - The movement of an edge dislocation was described...
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- 2. A specimen of Mg have a rectangular cross-section of dimensions 3.2mm by 19.1mm is deformed by tension. Using the load-elongation data tabulated below, do the following: Plot the data as engineering stress (in MPa) VS. engineering strain. Determine the elastic modulus Determine the yield strength (using a 0.2% offset method) Determine the tensile strength of the material Compute the modulus of resilience Compute the ductility Load (N) Length(mm) 63.50 1380 63.53 2780 63.56 5630 63.62 7430 63.70 8140 63.75 9870 64.14 12,850 14,100 14,340 13,830 12,500 fracture 65.41 66.68 67.95 69.22 70.49arrow_forward8. A cylindrical specimen of a hypothetical metal alloy is stressed in compression. If its original and final diameters are 20.000 and 20.025 mm, respectively, and its final length is 74.96 mm, compute its original length if the deformation is totally elastic. The elastic and shear moduli for this alloy are 105 GPa and 39.7 GPa, respectivelyarrow_forwardCan you represent strain as a function of time using the Maxwell Viscoelastic Model.arrow_forward
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