Friday, January 13, 2012

Properties to be considered for forming process

Following properties of metals play an important role in forming of metals:
1. Elasticity
2. Plasticity
3. Hardness
4. Strength
5. Ductility


Elasticity is the property of an object or material which causes it to be restored to its original shape after distortion.

A rubber band is easy to stretch, and snaps back to near its original length when released, but it is not as elastic as a piece of piano wire. The piano wire is harder to stretch, but would be said to be more elastic than the rubber band because of the precision of its return to its original length. A spring is an example of an elastic object - when stretched, it exerts a restoring force which tends to bring it back to its original length.

In other word, elasticity is the property of solid materials to deform under the application of an external force and to regain their original shape after the force is removed is referred to as its elasticity

The external force applied on a specified area is known as stress, while the amount of deformation is called the strain

It is also defined as the ability of material to return to its original dimensions after suffering a deformation or strain due to stress resulting from some applied force.

Plasticity is the property of material to be deformed repeatedly without rupture by the action of a force, and remain deformed after the force is removed.

In other words plasticity is the ability of a solid body to permanently change shape (deform) in response to mechanical loads or forces. Deformation characteristics are dependent on the material from which a body is made, as well as the magnitude and type of the imposed forces.

It is also defined as its ability to retain any deformation produced in it without fracture under the action of external load. 

Hardness is the resistance of a material to localized deformation.

It is also defined as the property by virtue of which a material resists the penetration of other bodies into it.

The term can apply to deformation from indentation, scratching, cutting or bending. In metals, ceramics and most polymers, the deformation considered is plastic deformation of the surface. For elastomers and some polymers, hardness is defined at the resistance to elastic deformation of the surface. 

The lack of a fundamental definition indicates that hardness is not be a basic property of a material, but rather a composite one with contributions from the yield strength, work hardening, true tensile strength, modulus, and others factors.

Strength is defined as the resistance offered by the material when subjected to external load. 
It is defined as the resistance offered by which the material opposes the deformation.

Higher the strength the higher is the capacity of the material to withstand load without rupture or failure. 

Depending upon the type of load the strength can be tensile, compressive, shear, bending and torsional. 

Resistance offered by the material is stress, so the strength can be measured in terms of stress. 

The stress required to cause permanent deformation is called yield strength and the maximum stress before fracture is called ultimate strength.

Ductility is a property of material by virtue of which it can be drawn into wires without rupture and without loosing much strength. 

It is measured by the percentage elongation or percentage reduction in the cross sectional area before rupture.

Some other properties to be considered:

Stiffness of a material is defined as its resistance to elastic deformation.

Toughness is the ability of a material to resist fracture under impact loads, i.e., suddenly applied loads.

Brittleness is the ability of a material to which they shatter before much strain has applied.

Tenacity is defined as the ability of a material to resist fracture under the action of a tensile force.




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