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Stress physics - Residual stress |  | Stress physics - Residual stress: Encyclopedia II - Stress physics - Residual stress |  | Residual stresses are stresses that remain after the original cause of the stresses has been removed. Residual stresses occur for a variety of reasons, including inelastic deformations and heat treatment. Heat from welding may cause localized expansion. When the finished weldment cools, some areas cool and contract more than others, leaving residual stresses. Castings may also have large residual stresses due to uneven cooling.
While uncontrolled residual stresses are undesirable, many designs rely on them. For example, toughened glas ...
See also:Stress physics, Stress physics - Stress in one-dimensional bodies, Stress physics - Cauchy's principle, Stress physics - Plane stress, Stress physics - Principal stresses, Stress physics - Mohr's circle, Stress physics - Stress in three dimensions, Stress physics - Stress tensor, Stress physics - Generalized notation, Stress physics - Why is stress a symmetric tensor?, Stress physics - Stress measurement, Stress physics - Units, Stress physics - Residual stress, Stress physics - Books |  | | Stress physics, Stress physics - Books, Stress physics - Cauchy's principle, Stress physics - Generalized notation, Stress physics - Mohr's circle, Stress physics - Plane stress, Stress physics - Principal stresses, Stress physics - Residual stress, Stress physics - Stress in one-dimensional bodies, Stress physics - Stress in three dimensions, Stress physics - Stress measurement, Stress physics - Stress tensor, Stress physics - Units, Stress physics - Why is stress a symmetric tensor?, Strain tensor, Stress-energy tensor, Stress concentration |  | |
|  |  | Stress physics: Encyclopedia II - Stress physics - Residual stress
Stress physics - Residual stress
Residual stresses are stresses that remain after the original cause of the stresses has been removed. Residual stresses occur for a variety of reasons, including inelastic deformations and heat treatment. Heat from welding may cause localized expansion. When the finished weldment cools, some areas cool and contract more than others, leaving residual stresses. Castings may also have large residual stresses due to uneven cooling.
While uncontrolled residual stresses are undesirable, many designs rely on them. For example, toughened glass and prestressed concrete rely on residual stress to prevent brittle failure. Similarly, a gradient in martensite formation leaves residual stress in some swords with particularly hard edges (notably the katana), which can prevent the opening of edge cracks. In certain types of gun barrels made with two telescoping tubes forced together, the inner tube is compressed while the outer tube stretches, preventing cracks from opening in the rifling when the gun is fired. These tubes are often heated or dunked in liquid nitrogen to aid assembly.
Press fits are the most common intentional use of residual stress. Automotive wheel studs, for example, are pressed into holes on the wheel hub. The holes are smaller than the studs, requiring force to drive the studs into place. The residual stresses fasten the parts together. Nails are another example.
Other related archives1882, 2-D, 3-D, Augustin Louis Cauchy, Christian Otto Mohr, Eigenvalues, Hooke's law, MPa, N, Nails, Pascal's law, Poisson contraction, Poisson's ratio, Residual stresses, SI, Strain tensor, Stress concentration, Stress-energy tensor, Stress-strain diagrams, abscissa, area, behavior, bolt, brittle, compressive strength, coordinates, cross section, diameter, ductile, eigenvectors, engineering, fluid, force, fracture, hard, katana, magnitude, martensite, measurement, mm, nitrogen, normal, normal stress, ordinate, pascal, physics, plastic, plastic deformation, plasticity, pressure, prestressed concrete, proportional, psi, rifling, rubber, scalar, shear stress, steel, strain, tensile strength, tensile test, tensor, tensors, torque, toughened glass, trace, vector, viscosity, von Mises stress, wire, yield
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Residual stress", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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