Click Here to
Order this information in Print

Click Here to
Order this information on CD-ROM

Click Here to
Download this information in PDF Format

 

Click here to make tpub.com your Home Page

Page Title: Stress-Temperature Curves
Back | Up | Next

Click here for a printable version

Google


Web
www.tpub.com

Home

   
Information Categories
.... Administration
Advancement
Aerographer
Automotive
Aviation
Combat
Construction
Diving
Draftsman
Engineering
Electronics
Food and Cooking
Math
Medical
Music
Nuclear Fundamentals
Photography
Religion
USMC
   
Products
  Educational CD-ROM's
Printed Manuals
Downloadable Books
   
Back
Figure 1   Basic Fracture Types
Up
Material Science Volume 2 of 2
Next
Crack  Initiation  and  Propagation

Brittle Fracture DOE-HDBK-1017/2-93 BRITTLE FRACTURE MECHANISM Stress-Temperature  Curves One of the biggest concerns with brittle fracture is that it can occur at stresses well below the yield  strength  (stress  corresponding  to  the  transition  from  elastic  to  plastic  behavior)  of  the material, provided certain conditions are present.   These conditions are: a flaw such as a crack; a stress of sufficient intensity to develop a small deformation at the crack tip; and a temperature low  enough  to  promote  brittle  fracture.    The  relationship  between  these  conditions  is  best described using a generalized stress-temperature diagram for crack initiation and arrest as shown in Figure 2. Figure 2  illustrates that as the  temperature goes down,  the tensile strength (Curve  A) and the Figure 2   Stress-Temperature Diagram for Crack Initiation and Arrest yield  strength  (Curve  B)  increase.   The  increase  in  tensile  strength,  sometimes  known  as  the ultimate  strength  (a  maximum of  increasing  strain  on the  stress-strain  curve),  is  less  than  the increase in the yield point.  At some low temperature, on the order of 10°F for carbon steel, the yield strength and tensile strength coincide.  At this temperature and below, there is no yielding when a failure occurs.  Hence, the failure is brittle.  The temperature at which the yield and tensile strength coincide is the NDT temperature. Rev. 0 Page 3 MS-04

Privacy Statement - Press Release - Copyright Information. - Contact Us - Support Integrated Publishing