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Stress II
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Stress II

Jan 20, 2016

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Stress II. Stress as a Vector - Traction. Force has variable magnitudes in different directions (i.e., it’s a vector ) Area has constant magnitude with direction (a scalar ):  Stress acting on a plane is a vector  = F/A or  = F . 1/A - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Stress II

Stress II

Page 2: Stress II

Stress as a Vector - Traction Force has variable magnitudes in different directions (i.e.,

it’s a vector) Area has constant magnitude with direction (a scalar):

Stress acting on a plane is a vector

= F/A or = F . 1/A

A traction is a vector quantity, and, as a result, it has both magnitude and direction These properties allow a geologist to manipulate tractions

following the principles of vector algebra

Like traction, a force is a vector quantity and can be manipulated following the same mathematical principals

Page 3: Stress II

Stress and Traction Stress can more accurately be termed "traction." A traction is a force per unit area acting on a

specified surface This more accurate and encompassing definition of

"stress" elevates stress beyond being a mere vector, to an entity that cannot be described by a single pair of measurements (i.e. magnitude and orientation)

"Stress" strictly speaking, refers to the whole collection of tractions acting on each and every plane of every conceivable orientation passing through a discrete point in a body at a given instant of time

Page 4: Stress II

Normal and Shear Force Many planes can pass through a point in a rock body Force (F) across any of these planes can be resolved into two

components: Shear stress: Fs , & normal stress: Fn, where:

Fs = F sin θ Fn = F cos θ

tan θ = Fs/Fn

Smaller θ means smaller Fs

Note that if θ =0, Fs=0 and all force is Fn

Page 5: Stress II

Normal and Shear Stress Stress on an arbitrarily-oriented plane through a point, is

not necessarily perpendicular to the that plane

The stress (acting on a plane can be resolved into two components:

Normal stress (n)

Component of stress perpendicular to the plane, i.e., parallel to the normal to the plane

Shear stress (s) or Components of stress parallel to the plane

Page 6: Stress II

Normal and Shear Stress

Page 7: Stress II

Stress is the intensity of force Stress is Force per unit area

= lim F/A when A →0

A given force produces a large stress when A given force produces a large stress when applied on a small area!applied on a small area!

The same force produces a small stress when The same force produces a small stress when applied on a larger areaapplied on a larger area

The state of stress at a point is anisotropic: Stress varies on different planes with different

orientation

Page 8: Stress II

Geopressure Gradient P/z

The average overburden pressure (i.e., lithostatic P) at the base of a 1 km thick rock column (i.e., z = 1 km), with density () of 2.5 gr/cm3 is 25 to 30 MPa

P = gz [ML -1T-2]P = (2670 kg m-3)(9.81 m s-2)(103 m)

= 26192700 kg m-1s-2 (pascal)

= 26 MPa

The geopressure gradient:

P/z 30 MPa/km 0.3 kb/km (kb = 100 MPa) i.e. P is 3 kb at a depth of 10 km

Page 9: Stress II

Types of Stress Tension: Stress acts to and away from a plane

pulls the rock apart forms special fractures called joint may lead to increase in volume

Compression: stress acts to and toward a plane squeezes rocks may decrease volume

Shear: acts || to a surface leads to change in shape

Page 10: Stress II

Scalars Physical quantities, such as the density or

temperature of a body, which in no way depend on direction are expressed as a single number e.g., temperature, density, mass only have a magnitude (i.e., are a number) are tensors of zero-order have 0 subscript and 20 and 30 components in

2D and 3D, respectively

Page 11: Stress II

Vectors

Some physical quantities are fully specified by a magnitude and a direction, e.g.:

Force, velocity, acceleration, and displacement

Vectors: relate one scalar to another scalar have magnitude and direction are tensors of the first-order have 1 subscript (e.g., vi) and 21 and 31

components in 2D and 3D, respectively

Page 12: Stress II

Tensors Some physical quantities require nine numbers

for their full specification (in 3D) Stress, strain, and conductivity are examples of

tensor

Tensors: relate two vectors are tensors of second-order have 2 subscripts (e.g., ij); and 22 and 32

components in 2D and 3D, respectively

Page 13: Stress II

Stress at a Point - Tensor To discuss stress on a randomly oriented

plane we must consider the three-dimensional case of stress

The magnitudes of the n and s vary as a function of the orientation of the plane

In 3D, each shear stress,s is further resolved into two components parallel to each of the 2D Cartesian coordinates in that plane

Page 14: Stress II

Tensors Tensors are vector processorsA tensor (Tij) such as strain, transforms an

input vector Ii (such as an original particle line) into an output vector, Oi (final particle line):

Oi=Tij Ii (Cauchy’s eqn.)e.g., wind tensor changing the initial velocity vector

of a boat into a final velocity vector!

|O1| |a b||I1|

|O2| = |c d||I2|

Page 15: Stress II

Example (Oi=TijIi ) Let Ii = (1,1) i.e, I1=1; I2=1

and the stress Tij be given by: |1.5 0| |-0.5 1|

The input vector Ii is transformed into the output vector(Oi) (NOTE: Oi=TijIi)

| O1 |=| 1.5 0||I1| = |1.5 0||1| | O2 | | -0.5 1||I1| |-0.5 1||1|

Which gives:O1 = 1.5I1 + 0I2 = 1.5 + 0 = 1.5O2 = -0.5I1 + 1I2 = -0.5 +1 = 0.5

i.e., the output vector Oi=(1.5, 0.5) or:O1 = 1.5 or |1.5|O2 = 0.5 |0.5|

Page 16: Stress II

Cauchy’s Law and Stress TensorCauchy’s Law: Pi= σijlj (I & j can be 1, 2, or 3) P1, P2, and P3 are tractions on the plane parallel to the three

coordinate axes, and l1, l2, and l3 are equal to cos, cos , cos

direction cosines of the pole to the plane w.r.t. the coordinate axes, respectively

For every plane passing through a point, there is a unique vector lj representing the unit vector perpendicular to the plane (i.e., its normal)

The stress tensor (ij) linearly relates or associates an output vector pi (traction vector on a given plane) with a particular input vector lj (i.e., with a plane of given orientation)

Page 17: Stress II

Stress tensor In the yz (or 23) plane, normal to the x (or 1) axis: the normal

stress is xx and the shear stresses are: xy and xz

In the xz (or 13) plane, normal to the y (or 2) axis: the normal stress is yy and the shear stresses are: yx and yz

In the xy (or 12) plane, normal to the z (or 3) axis: the normal stress is zz and the shear stresses are: zx and zy

Thus, we have a total of 9 components for a stress acting on a extremely small cube at a point

|xx xy xz |

ij = |yx yy yz |

|zx zy zz | Thus, stress is a tensor quantity

Page 18: Stress II

Stress tensor

Page 19: Stress II

Principal Stresses The stress tensor matrix:

| 11 12 13 |

ij = | 21 22 23 |

| 31 32 33 | Can be simplified by choosing the coordinates so that they are

parallel to the principal axes of stress:

| 1 0 0 |

ij = | 0 2 0 |

| 0 0 3 | In this case, the coordinate planes only carry normal stress;

i.e., the shear stresses are zero The 1 , 2 , and 3 are the major, intermediate, and minor

principal stress, respectively 1>3 ; principal stresses may be tensile or compressive

Page 20: Stress II

Stress Ellipse

Page 21: Stress II

State of StressIsotropic stress (Pressure) The 3D stresses are equal in magnitude in all directions;

like the radii of a sphere

The magnitude of pressure is equal to the mean of the principal stresses

The mean stress or hydrostatic component of stress:

P = (1 + 2 + 3 ) / 3

• Pressure is positive when it is compressive, and negative when it is tensile

Page 22: Stress II

Pressure Leads to Dilation Dilation (+ev & -ev)

Volume change; no shape change involved We will discuss dilation when we define strain

ev=(v´-vo)/vo = v/vo [no dimension]

Where v´ & vo are final & original volumes, respectively

Page 23: Stress II

Isotropic Pressure Fluids (liquids/gases) such as magma or water, are

stressed equally in all directions

Examples of isotropic pressure: hydrostatic, lithostatic, atmospheric

All of these are pressures (P) due to the column of water, rock, or air, with thickness z and density ; g is the acceleration due to gravity:

P = gz