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What is yield load?

Updated: 12/24/2022
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Q: What is yield load?
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What is strain hardening?

When ductile material is loaded, when stress reaches yield and if the load continues, as long as load is not high enough to break material, the material is strain hardened when returning to no load. That means its yield strength will be higher than before, and the material is stronger.


Difference between yield stress and yield strength?

Stress is a measure of the load applied to a sample relative to a cross sectional area of the sample. Strength is a quantification of the samples ability to carry a load. The terms "yield strength" and "yield stress" of a material are usually used interchangeably (correct or not). It is the stress which will just cause the material to plastically deform. If a material yields at 30,000 psi, the yield stress is 30,000 psi. If the part in question has a cross sectional area of 2 square inches, the strength at yield would be 60,000 pounds, but usually we just say the yield strength is 30,000 psi.


Why fracture strength is always greater than yield strength?

The material has to stretch (strain) first before it breaks. For ductile materials, when stretch reaches a certain point it permanently deforms (yield) and continues to carry load until it then breaks as load increases. For brittle materials like glass which do not permanently deform thay simply break without yield.


What is 'yield strength' when translated from English to Italian?

Carico di snervamento is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "yield strength." The engineering-related, masculine singular phrase translates literally as "load (stress) of yield" in English and will be synonymous in English with "yield point," the point at which tensile strength no longer holds its maximum load and starts to deform plastically. The pronunciation will be "KA-ree-ko dee SNER-va-MEN-to" in Italian.


What is the physical property of strength?

ultimate strength is the value at which something breaks, and yield strength is the value at which something exhibits a permanent deformation after load.


Why would an engineer be interested in the yield strength of a metal for a particular application?

Yield strength tells you how much force/load a piece of metal can take before it'll change shape and not spring back. Let's say you're doing a loading ramp for a trailer. It's OK if it bends down a bit during use, but you really want it to spring back to its original shape after. And for that to happen the yield strength must be more than the load that the ramp will see when used.


What is yield stress?

Yield stress is the point at which the material is no longer linear under load; the material starts to become plastic and when unloaded will not return to its original length. Typically the yield point is defined as 0.2% offset - the value of strain that remains in the part after unloaded


What is yield point?

it is when the rock compresses into trees and it turns into a fossil in a few million years


What do you mean by the Euler's load in connection with a long columns?

Euler developed the theory of buckling of long columns. The Euler load is compressive and may be less than the load required to yield or break the part; that is, it will buckle first. The critical bucking load depends on the boundary conditions, but is a function of pi squared times modulus x inertia, divided by length squared


What is the property of strength?

ultimate strength is the value at which something breaks, and yield strength is the value at which something exhibits a permanent deformation after load.


How do you convert steal yield and tensile strength to pounds?

If you load a beam in tension or compression only ( pull or push) then you multiply the tensile yield or ultimate strength by the area of the beam cross section. Thus applies to a simple beam (bar) only. If you load the beam any other way, such as bending or twisting, or perpendicular to its axis you need to use formulas from an engineering strength of materials course or handbook.


What does it mean if a material has a high Yield Stress value?

In colloquial terms, it is "strong". It can take a high load, and return back to an undamaged, undeformed state afterward. If the yield strength is equal to or very close to the ultimate tensile strength, common when it is a very high value, that indicates the material is not very ductile. Glass is a material like this. You can load it very high, but it will break rather than "stretch".