Introduction to the Displacement and Acceleration Equation
This equation relates displacement, original velocity, constant acceleration, and time: It reads: Displacement equals the original velocity multiplied by time plus one half the acceleration multiplied by the square of time.A sloping line on a displacement-time graph shows that the object is moving. In a displacement-time graph, the slope or gradient of the line, is equal to the velocity of the object. The steeper the line (and the greater the gradient) the faster the object is moving. The gradient of a displacement–time graph = velocity.
If the velocity time graph is curved, then the slope of the graph is different at different points. As shown in the figure, the slope at two different points P1 and P2 is different. Since acceleration, a = dv/dt = slope of the curve (at the point where we want to calculate the acceleration.)
The three most common types of motion graphs are acceleration vs. time graphs, velocity vs. time graphs and displacement vs. time graphs.
In graph A.,B, the time is in decreasing direction and since time is always increasing and is positive hence it is incorrect. in graph C the object is moving with infinite displacement at same time,also implies that velocity of object is infinite which is not possible for motion of body hence this is also impossible.
Constant acceleration means a horizontal line for the acceleration graph. The acceleration is the slope of the velocity graph. Constant acceleration = constant slope = straight line for the velocity graph.
Answer: The volumetric strain is the change in volume divided by the original volume. The change in volume is the difference between the final volume (V2) and the initial volume (V1). The strain can be found using the formula: S = -0.950.
Biomechanics of Injury. When human tissues are subjected to a loading force (or stress) such as they are during activity, then they will deform (this deformation is called strain).
A stress-strain curve is a graphical way to show the reaction of a material when a load is applied. It shows a comparison between stress and strain. Stress is the ratio of the load or force to the cross-sectional area of the material to which the load is applied.
Stress is the force applied to a material, divided by the material's cross-sectional area. Strain is the deformation or displacement of material that results from an applied stress.
Yield point. Yield point, in mechanical engineering, load at which a solid material that is being stretched begins to flow, or change shape permanently, divided by its original cross-sectional area; or the amount of stress in a solid at the onset of permanent deformation.
Stress and strain are normalized so that they do not depend on the geometry of the part. When you divide the load by the cross-sectional area, you find that the yield stress of both rods is the same. The same is true for deformation. All solid materials stretch to some degree.
The slope of a stress-strain graph shows us the value of *modulus of elasticity* within elastic portion. Modulus of elasticity is nothing but the measure of elasticity in a metal. Hence stress-strain curve plays very crucial role in deciding the properties like, Toughness.
The permanent deformation has a strain value at the point where the green line intercepts the horizontal axis. The value of stress at the fracture point is called breaking stress (or ultimate stress). Materials with similar elastic properties, such as two metals, may have very different breaking stresses.
CONCEPTS OF LOAD TOLERANCE. The term “load” describes physical stresses acting on the body or on anatomical structures within the body. The term “tolerance” is used to describe the capacity of physical and physiological responses of the body to loading.
Pick the point you wish to apply displacement, when finished, click on “done” you will get the “edit the boundary condition” menu. You can apply three displacements and three rotations. Suppose you want to apply 5 millimeter displacement in U3 to a node.
Stress strain graph plotting for specific area in Abaqus? Result --> History Output. In the History Output dialog box Select Stress : S22 at Element e-g element 9 from the list Output Variable. Click on Plot in the original dialog box.
If you want the total reaction force, you can just use a Free body cut, and find the reaction force from that. For Field Output: Create a Field Output. Select RF under Forces/Reactions. For History Output: You want to define a Set for the elements of interest.
The plot represents the expression in the dialog box, which ABAQUS considers temporary data, whether or not you have saved your new X–Y data object. To plot your new, saved X–Y data object, select Tools XY Data Plot from the main menu bar and select the X–Y data object from the pull-right menu.
Logarithmic strain (output variable LE) is the default strain output in ABAQUS/Explicit; nominal strain (output variable NE) can be requested as well. The “integrated” total strain is not available in ABAQUS/Explicit.
To export X–Y data to Microsoft Excel, select one or more X–Y data objects and click OK. Abaqus/CAE creates a new Excel file and displays the exported data in a worksheet. If you export a single X–Y data object, Abaqus/CAE also plots the data in a chart; a chart is not created if you export multiple X–Y data objects.
When you talk of graph of force vs displacement , it means that force is some function of displacement . Hence, nature of the graph and it's slope will depend on the nature of the function connecting force with displacement. Suppose force is , F=-kx as in one dimensional SHM.
If we generate a graph of force versus distance, the area under the curve will represent the work done by the force. Tension and friction are both doing work. Since the velocity is constant, the applied force has to be countered by an equal friction force in the opposite direction.
When you talk of graph of force vs displacement , it means that force is some function of displacement . Suppose force is , F=-kx as in one dimensional SHM. Then graph will be straight line graph in fourth quadrant with negative slop equal to negative of force constant.
Whenever a force makes something move, work is done. The amount of work done is equal to the amount of energy transferred. When work is done by something, it loses energy; when work is done on something it gains energy.
The principle of work and kinetic energy (also known as the work-energy theorem) states that the work done by the sum of all forces acting on a particle equals the change in the kinetic energy of the particle. Kinetic Energy: A force does work on the block.
Work is a scalar because it is the "dot" product of 2 vectors, also called the scalar product. W can also be expressed in terms of the components of the force and displacement vectors. Work is a vector because you multiply a force (a vector) by distance (a vector).
About Transcript. David shows how the area under a force vs. position graph equals the work done by the force and solves some sample problems. Created by David SantoPietro.