23.5:

General State of Stress

JoVE Core
Mechanical Engineering
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JoVE Core Mechanical Engineering
General State of Stress

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01:21 min

May 23, 2024

The general state of stress within a material can be accurately depicted using a stress tensor. This tensor encapsulates the internal forces distributed within a material subjected to external forces or deformations.

Specifically, consider a tetrahedral element where one face, labeled XYZ, is perpendicular to the line OA, and the remaining faces align with the coordinate axes with point O as the origin. At any point, such as point O, the stress tensor can be used to determine the stress components on any plane through O. This tensor is crucial in understanding how materials respond under various loading conditions by resolving forces into normal and shear components on the faces of the tetrahedron.

The areas of the tetrahedron's coordinate-aligned faces are calculated by multiplying the area of face XYZ by the direction cosines λx, λy, and λz  of line OA. These cosines connect the face's orientation to the coordinate axes, aiding in force resolution, which is critical to material and structural design. The equilibrium condition, that the sum of all forces along OA equals zero, leads to the normal stress equation expressed in a quadratic form with direction cosines.

Equation 1

This form identifies the principal axes of stress. If a new coordinate system is defined based on the direction cosines, the shear stress terms drop out, simplifying the stress tensor. These axes define the principal planes where shear stresses vanish and normal stresses, known as principal stresses, are maximized. Understanding these stress components is essential for predicting material failure modes and enhancing structural design.

Equation 2