Engineering
Strain Vs. True Strain
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For many engineering applications, the use of
'engineering stress and strain' values for material stress-strain curves will be
sufficient for obtaining correct answers in a plasticity analysis. Engineering
stress and strain are commonly represented in 2D by these equations:
e = DL
/ Lo
s = F / Ao
However, engineering strain is a small strain
measure which is invalid once the strain in your model is no longer 'small'
(approximately 5%). True strain, which is a nonlinear strain measure that is
dependent upon the final length of the model, is used for large strain
simulations. True stress and strain are commonly represented in 2D by these
equations:
e = ln(L / Lo)
t = F / A
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As engineers are often supplied with
engineering stress and strain test data, a conversion to true stress and strain
(also called log strain) is needed before inputing these material properties
into ANSYS. For uniaxial stress-strain data, engineering stress and strain can
be converted to true stress - log strain by:
el
= ln (1+e)
t =
s (1+e)
For your convenience, DRD has supplied the
following spreadsheet that has stored these formulas and can be used to convert
from engineering stress and strain to true stress - log strain. Simply put your
test values in the left columns and the right columns will be filled with
updated values for use in a large strain analysis.
Copyright 2011. DRD Technology Corporation.