For Cast Iron, per the related website is: .22 - .30. If you can get more information on the grade of the iron, you will be able to get close to the true value. I have in the past used 0.27 for cast iron.
Poisson's Ratio of stainless steel
0.17
Poisson's ratio is the negative ratio of how compression affects distortion. When an object is compressed in one direction it expands in two directions perpendicular to the direction of compression. The ratio is equal to d(transverse strain)/d(axial strain).
hi,it's the same!
Poisson ratio of most linear elastic material can be anywhere between 0 and 0.5.
Poisson's Ratio of stainless steel
0.25 to 0.3 depends on the steel
It is 0.25
The Poisson's Ratio for carbon graphite is typically around 0.15 to 0.3, indicating that when a material is stretched in one direction, it tends to contract in the perpendicular direction by a certain extent.
Steel by definition is carbon steel. The only thing that varies is the ratio.
In the Poisson's ratio formula, Poisson's ratio is directly related to Young's modulus. The formula is: Poisson's ratio (Lateral Strain / Longitudinal Strain) - (Transverse Stress / Longitudinal Stress) 1 / 2 (Young's Modulus / Shear Modulus). This shows that Poisson's ratio is inversely proportional to Young's modulus.
Poisson ratio of most linear elastic material can be anywhere between 0 and 0.5.
What is the poission's ratio in machenical structure ?
0.3-0.2
Iron is used for making steel, together with carbon. If you mix iron and carbon together at a ratio of 99% steel and 1% carbon, you get an alloy called hard steel. Which, as its name suggests, is very strong.
For elastic, isotropic and homogeneous materials, zero Poisson's ratio means that the material doesn't present lateral deformation on bending, compressing or extending.
modulus of elasticity = 15 Msi; poisson ratio = 0.3 modulus of rigidity = E/ ((2(1 + poisson)) = 5.8 Msi