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Page Title: Alternate Values
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Examples of Yeild Strength
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Material Science Volume 1 of 2
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Ductility

Properties of Metals DOE-HDBK-1017/1-93 PHYSICAL PROPERTIES Soft   steel,   when   tested   in   tension,   frequently   displays   a   peculiar characteristic, known as a yield point.  If the stress-strain curve is plotted, a drop in the load (or sometimes a constant load) is observed although the strain continues to increase.   Eventually, the metal is strengthened by the deformation, and the load increases with further straining.  The high point on the S-shaped portion of the curve, where yielding began, is known as the  upper  yield  point,  and  the  minimum  point  is  the  lower  yield  point. This phenomenon is very troublesome in certain deep drawing operations of sheet steel.   The steel continues  to elongate and to become thinner at local areas where the plastic strain initiates, leaving unsightly depressions called stretcher strains or "worms." The  proportional  limit  is  defined as  the stress  at which  the stress-strain curve  first  deviates  from  a  straight  line.    Below  this  limiting  value  of stress, the ratio of stress to strain is constant, and the material is said to obey Hooke's Law (stress is proportional to strain).  The proportional limit usually  is  not  used  in  specifications  because  the  deviation  begins  so gradually that controversies are sure to arise as to the exact stress at which the line begins to curve. The elastic limit has previously been defined as the stress at which plastic deformation begins.  This limit cannot be determined from the stress-strain curve.    The  method  of  determining  the  limit  would  have  to  include  a succession of slightly increasing loads with intervening complete unloading for the detection of the first plastic deformation or "permanent set."  Like the  proportional  limit,  its  determination  would  result  in  controversy. Elastic limit is used, however, as a descriptive, qualitative term. In many situations, the yield strength is used to identify the allowable stress to which a material can be subjected.   For components that have to withstand high pressures, such as those used in pressurized water reactors (PWRs), this criterion is not adequate.  To cover these situations, the maximum shear stress  theory of failure has been incorporated into the ASME (The American Society  of  Mechanical  Engineers)  Boiler  and  Pressure  Vessel  Code,  Section  III,  Rules  for Construction  of  Nuclear  Pressure  Vessels.    The  maximum  shear  stress  theory  of  failure  was originally  proposed  for  use  in  the  U.S.  Naval  Reactor  Program  for  PWRs.    It  will  not  be discussed in this text. Rev. 0 Page 23 MS-02

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