- Jan 4, 2001
- 41,596
- 20
- 81
I'm starting out with this equation.
I think I want to solve for sigma (Ok, ok, it's epsilon, not sigma. Oops), e, so that I can tell where on the stress/strain graph the material leaves the elastic region. I've got two equations to work with, Hooke's Law (s=Ee) which only applies in the elastic region, and s={K[ln(e+1)^n]}/(e+1), to find true stress in the plastic region. For each material, it would appear that there's a point where these two equations "meet" and then one becomes valid while the other is not. I figure I should know this so that on a test or quiz, I will know which equation I can use.
But with the natural log and the exponent, I'm not sure how it can be done. I've got either of these, which don't exactly help:
2
3
We skipped over logarithms in algebra or algebra II in middle/high school (we ran out of time to cover the relevant chapters), or whenever it was, and I've not had to deal with them until now. I'm not sure how helpful they'd be anyway.
I did already get a value for e by graphing both sides of the equation on my TI-89 and having it find the intercept, but I figure the professor would want to see the problems solved out by hand, rather than just, "My calculator did it."
Values:
K = 120000
n = 0.113
E = 10.4 * 10^6
Using the intercept function, I got a value for e of 0.0064853.
Update:
Yes, the solution was to simply use Hooke's Law, and solve for stress. If the stress was less than yield, than Hooke's Law was still applicable, and the strain fell within the elastic region of the stress/strain graph. If the stress was higher than yield, then the equation for true stress would have had to be used.
The professor laughed a bit when he saw how complicated I was trying to make it, though he was interested to know what numbers I came up with. Neither of us is exactly sure what the stress/strain values I came up with coincide with - the values I got with my TI-89 were where the two equations (Hooke's Law and true stress) coincided, but what exactly these values mean, or why the stress value that resulted wasn't equal to 73,000psi, we're not sure.
I think I want to solve for sigma (Ok, ok, it's epsilon, not sigma. Oops), e, so that I can tell where on the stress/strain graph the material leaves the elastic region. I've got two equations to work with, Hooke's Law (s=Ee) which only applies in the elastic region, and s={K[ln(e+1)^n]}/(e+1), to find true stress in the plastic region. For each material, it would appear that there's a point where these two equations "meet" and then one becomes valid while the other is not. I figure I should know this so that on a test or quiz, I will know which equation I can use.
But with the natural log and the exponent, I'm not sure how it can be done. I've got either of these, which don't exactly help:
2
3
We skipped over logarithms in algebra or algebra II in middle/high school (we ran out of time to cover the relevant chapters), or whenever it was, and I've not had to deal with them until now. I'm not sure how helpful they'd be anyway.
I did already get a value for e by graphing both sides of the equation on my TI-89 and having it find the intercept, but I figure the professor would want to see the problems solved out by hand, rather than just, "My calculator did it."
Values:
K = 120000
n = 0.113
E = 10.4 * 10^6
Using the intercept function, I got a value for e of 0.0064853.
Update:
Yes, the solution was to simply use Hooke's Law, and solve for stress. If the stress was less than yield, than Hooke's Law was still applicable, and the strain fell within the elastic region of the stress/strain graph. If the stress was higher than yield, then the equation for true stress would have had to be used.
The professor laughed a bit when he saw how complicated I was trying to make it, though he was interested to know what numbers I came up with. Neither of us is exactly sure what the stress/strain values I came up with coincide with - the values I got with my TI-89 were where the two equations (Hooke's Law and true stress) coincided, but what exactly these values mean, or why the stress value that resulted wasn't equal to 73,000psi, we're not sure.
