Shear Stress: Name: Wael Atiah Dhedan Bardi Grad:First Stage Subject: Mechanical
Shear Stress: Name: Wael Atiah Dhedan Bardi Grad:First Stage Subject: Mechanical
Shear Stress: Name: Wael Atiah Dhedan Bardi Grad:First Stage Subject: Mechanical
Operations Branch
Shear stress
where:
τ = the shear stress;
F = the force applied;
A = the cross-sectional area of material with area parallel to the applied force
vector.
Other forms
Pure
Pure shear stress is related to pure shear strain, denoted γ, by the following
equation:[2]
Beam shear
Beam shear is defined as the internal shear stress of a beam caused by the shear
force applied to the beam.
where
f = total shear force at the location in question;
Q = statical moment of area;
b = thickness (width) in the material perpendicular to the shear;
I = Moment of Inertia of the entire cross sectional area.
The beam shear formula is also known as Zhuravskii shear stress formula
after Dmitrii Ivanovich Zhuravskii who derived it in 1855.
Semi-monocoque shear
Shear stresses within a semi-monocoque structure may be calculated by idealizing
the cross-section of the structure into a set of stringers (carrying only axial loads)
and webs (carrying only shear flows). Dividing the shear flow by the thickness of a
given portion of the semi-monocoque structure yields the shear stress. Thus, the
maximum shear stress will occur either in the web of maximum shear flow or
minimum thickness
Also constructions in soil can fail due to shear; e.g., the weight of an earth-
filled dam or dike may cause the subsoil to collapse, like a small landslide.
Impact shear
The maximum shear stress created in a solid round bar subject to impact is given as
the equation:
where
U = change in kinetic energy;
G = shear modulus;
V = volume of rod;
and
U = Urotating + Uapplied;
Urotating = 1/2Iω2;
Uapplied = Tθdisplaced;
I = mass moment of inertia;
ω = angular speed.
where
μ is the dynamic viscosity of the flow;
u is the flow velocity along the boundary;
y is the height above the boundary.
The Newton's constitutive law, for any general geometry (including the flat plate
above mentioned), states that shear tensor (a second-order tensor) is proportional to
the flow velocity gradient (the velocity is a vector, so its gradient is a second-order
tensor):
,
The above formula is no longer the Newton's law but a generic tensorial identity:
one could always find an expression of the viscosity as function of the flow
velocity given any expression of the shear stress as function of the flow velocity.
On the other hand, given a shear stress as function of the flow velocity, it
represents a Newtonian flow only if it can be expressed as a constant for the
gradient of the flow velocity. The constant one finds in this case is the dynamic
viscosity of the flow.
This relationship can be exploited to measure the wall shear stress. If a sensor
could directly measure the gradient of the velocity profile at the wall, then
multiplying by the dynamic viscosity would yield the shear stress. Such a sensor
was demonstrated by A. A. Naqwi and W. C. Reynolds. The interference pattern
generated by sending a beam of light through two parallel slits forms a network of
linearly diverging fringes that seem to originate from the plane of the two slits As a
particle in a fluid passes through the fringes, a receiver detects the reflection of the
fringe pattern. The signal can be processed, and knowing the fringe angle, the
height and velocity of the particle can be extrapolated. The measured value of wall
velocity gradient is independent of the fluid properties and as a result does not
require calibration. Recent advancements in the micro-optic fabrication
technologies have made it possible to use integrated diffractive optical element to
fabricate diverging fringe shear stress sensors usable both in air and liquid. [
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