Stress Concentration

A stress concentration is a phenomenon encounterered in mechanical engineering where an object under load has higher than average local stresses due to its shape. The types of shape that cause these concentrations are: cracks, sharp corners, holes and narrowing of the object. High local stresses can cause the object to fail more easily than its overall size suggests. A task for the engineer is to design the shape of the object to reduce stress concentrations. A counter intuitive method of reducing one of the worst types of stress concentration, a crack, is to drill a large hole at the end of the crack. The drilled hole, with its relatively large diameter, causes less stress concentration than the sharp end of a crack. Classic cases of metal failures provoked by stress concentrations include metal fatigue in the windows of the De Havilland Comet aircraft and brittle fractures at the corners of hatches in Liberty ships in cold and stressful conditions in winter storms in the Atlantic Ocean.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
endothelium derived relaxing factor
british columbia provincial highway 41
julia sweeney
specialized dictionary
british columbia provincial highway 395
optic radiation
primary visual cortex
british columbia provincial highway 21
edward e. kramer
1982
ron mueck
dragon con
ninety fourth united states congress
wrangel island
wrangell island
miscible
mark king (snooker player)
william burnett
subbayya sivasankaranarayana pillai
joe swail
british columbia provincial highway 6
citiwiki
taha maori
technical government
john heywood
pregnana milanese
whitehead torsion
jacob burnet
compression (functional analysis)
u.s. highway 223
hms challenger
judensau
longreach airport
bingu wa mutharika
hms challenger (k07)
rooikat afv
a song is a city
omega 6 fatty acid
run time checking
linkage disequilibrium
madeline tompkins
norland, ontario
gilbert blane
creep