Ah yes the part of the curve where the stress permanently changes you. Yeah, accurate.
57 0 Replythis assumes a ductile material. I myself am smiling as though everything is fine in the elastic region and may snap at any moment.
39 0 ReplyWhat a fragile personality...
3 1 Replybrittle. brittle materials fail in the elastic portion of the stress strain diagram
9 0 ReplyFound the titanium personality
4 0 Reply
Can a TI-84slinger explain this for us pipette-wielders?
35 0 ReplyPast the elastic deformation region / yield stress you get plastic deformation, which even when the stress is completely removed there is permanent deformation.
52 0 ReplyGotcha. Thanks! Do the points P, E, Y, U, and F stand for something or are the letters arbitrary?
16 0 ReplyLooks like the plastic deformation point was placed before the elastic point.
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Everything past the dotted line is the point where the material won't go back to its original shape.
Example: You can push on the hood of your car all you want, it'll flex, and go back to its original shape (elastic deformation); but stand on it, and it'll dent (plastic deformation).25 0 Reply
"have you tried modeling this with something more flexible?" -The Project Manager.
18 0 ReplyManager "So all that you need is more strain to reduce the stress? Here are 10 more tasks which should strain you quite a bit"
14 0 ReplyThe plastic zone is no joke, my friend.
10 0 ReplyIs it sort of like the friend zone?
2 1 ReplyIndeed, it leaves you forever deformed.
2 0 Reply
Have considered recrystallisation
therapy10 0 ReplyThe material is too ductile. I am at the peak of a narrow yield curve and then, snap, material breaks.
6 0 ReplyI like plastic.
5 0 ReplyWell, do we have some good news for you about what's currently in your body...
8 0 ReplyYeah when I jerk off I cum credit cards.
4 2 Reply
Well, mom, maybe write like a 60-year-old and not a 14-year-old and I'll respond.
4 1 ReplyOuch yes, very true, but ouch
4 1 Reply