Page 105 - 04. Subyek Engineering Materials - Manufacturing, Engineering and Technology SI 6th Edition - Serope Kalpakjian, Stephen Schmid (2009)
P. 105

84       Chapter 2  Mechanical Behavior, Testing, and Manufacturing Properties of Materials

          KEY TE RMS

          Bauschinger effect       Engineering strain       Modulus of rupture       Strength coefficient
          Blue brittleness         Engineering stress       Poisson’s ratio          Stress-corrosion cracking
          Brittle fracture         Fatigue                  Reduction of area        Stress relaxation
          Buckling                 Fatigue failure          Residual stresses        Superplasticity
          Charpy test              Flexural strength        Rupture                  Tension
          Compression              Fracture                 Shear                    Torsion test
          Creep                    Hardness                 Shear modulus            Toughness
          Defects                  Impact loading           Shore test               Transition temperature
          Deformation rate         Inclusions               Strain aging             True strain
          Disk test                Izod test                Strain-hardening exponent  True stress
          Ductile fracture         Leeb test                Strain rate              Ultimate tensile strength
          Ductility                Microhardness            Strain-rate sensitivity  Yield stress
          Durometer                Modulus of elasticity      exponent
          Elongation               Modulus of rigidity      Strain softening

           BIBLIOGRAPHY

          Ashby, M.F., Materials Selection  in Mechanical Design,  Chandler, H., Hardness Testing, 2nd ed., ASM International
               3rd ed. Pergamon, 2005.                           1999.
          Ashby, M.F., and jones, D.R.H., Engineering Materials,  Courtney, T.H., Mechanical Behavior of Materials, 2nd ed.,
               Vol.  1, An Introduction to Their Properties and  Waveland Press, 2005.
               Applications,3rd ed., 2005; Vol. 2, An Introduction  Davis, ].R. (ed.), Tensile Testing, 2nd ed., ASM International,
               to Microstructures, Processing and Design’ 3rd ed.,  2004.
               2005.                                        Dowling,  N.E.,  Mechanical  Behavior  of  Materials:
          ASM Handbook, Vol. 8: Mechanical Testing and Evaluation.  Engineering Methods for Deformation, Fracture, and
               ASM International, 2000.                          Fatigue, 3rd ed., Prentice Hall, 2006.
           Budinski, K.G., and Budinski, M.K., Engineering Materials:  Hosford, WF., Mechanical Behavior of Materials, Cambridge,
               Properties and Selection, 8th ed., Prentice Hall, 2004.  2005.
           Cardelli, F., Materials Handbook: A Concise Desk Reference,  Wulpi, D.]., Understanding How Components Fail, 2nd ed.,
               2nd ed., Springer, 2008.                          ASM International, 1999.

           REVIEW QUESTIONS


           2.l.  Distinguish between engineering stress and true stress.  2.l I.  Explain what uniform elongation means in tension
           2.2.  Describe the events that occur when a specimen under-  testing.
           goes a tension test. Sketch a plausible stress-strain curve, and  2.I2.  Describe the difference between deformation rate and
           identify all significant regions and points between them.  strain rate. What unit does each one have?
           Assume that loading continues up to fracture.
                                                            2.l3.  Describe the difficulties involved in making a com-
           2.3.  What is ductility, and how is it measured?  pression test.
           2.4.  In  the equation  0' = Ke", which represents  the  2.l4.  What is Hooke’s law? Young’s modulus? Poisson’s
           stress-strain curve for a material, what is the significance of
                                                            ratio?
           the exponent n?
                                                            2.l5.  Describe the difference between transgranular and
           2.5.  What is strain-rate sensitivity, and how is it measured?
                                                            intergranular fracture.
           2.6.  What test can measure the properties of a material un-
           dergoing shear strain?                           2.|6.  What is the reason that yield strength is generally
                                                            defined as a 0.2% offset strength?
           2.7.  What testing procedures can be used to measure the
           properties of brittle materials, such as ceramics and carbides?  2.l7.  Why does the fatigue strength of a specimen or part
           2.8.  Describe the differences between brittle and ductile  depend on its surface finish?
           fracture.                                         2.|8.  If striations are observed under microscopic examina-
           2.9.  Differentiate between stress relaxation and creep.  tion of a fracture surface, what do they suggest regarding the
           2.|0.  Describe the difference between elastic and plastic  mode of fracture?
           behavior.
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