jpjamo
Mechanical
- May 4, 2005
- 30
Hi all,
This is a first time in a few years (since about 2nd year uni!) I have to look at materials properties in detail. I have been doing a bunch of research into a few Polypropylene (20% GF and MF) and Nylon 6 (30% GF)materials for a particular application. What I have been finding though is that most of the data sheets available on the web (from MatWeb, IDES, and even the supplier websites themselves), seem to have data missing.
For example yield stress, poissons ratio or tensile strength will be commonly missing.
I am wondering how yield stress can be left out unless the material doesn't have a defined yield point in its stress-strain curve? And if the material doesn't have a defined yield stress how do you approximate it for the purposes of simple FEA or hand calcs? or should I just use the UTS given?
Also if poissons ratio is not given should I just use the 0.3 to 0.5 range and compare results? Or is there somewhere that standard poissons ratios are defined that I should be using?
Thanks in advance!
James
This is a first time in a few years (since about 2nd year uni!) I have to look at materials properties in detail. I have been doing a bunch of research into a few Polypropylene (20% GF and MF) and Nylon 6 (30% GF)materials for a particular application. What I have been finding though is that most of the data sheets available on the web (from MatWeb, IDES, and even the supplier websites themselves), seem to have data missing.
For example yield stress, poissons ratio or tensile strength will be commonly missing.
I am wondering how yield stress can be left out unless the material doesn't have a defined yield point in its stress-strain curve? And if the material doesn't have a defined yield stress how do you approximate it for the purposes of simple FEA or hand calcs? or should I just use the UTS given?
Also if poissons ratio is not given should I just use the 0.3 to 0.5 range and compare results? Or is there somewhere that standard poissons ratios are defined that I should be using?
Thanks in advance!
James