fbpx
Wikipedia

Shear stress

Shear stress, often denoted by τ (Greek: tau), is the component of stress coplanar with a material cross section. It arises from the shear force, the component of force vector parallel to the material cross section. Normal stress, on the other hand, arises from the force vector component perpendicular to the material cross section on which it acts.

Shear stress
Common symbols
τ
SI unitpascal
Derivations from
other quantities
τ = F/A
A shearing force is applied to the top of the rectangle while the bottom is held in place. The resulting shear stress, τ, deforms the rectangle into a parallelogram. The area involved would be the top of the parallelogram.

General shear stress

The formula to calculate average shear stress is force per unit area.:[1]

 

where:

τ = the shear stress;
F = the force applied;
A = the cross-sectional area of material with area parallel to the applied force vector.

Other forms

Wall shear stress

Wall shear stress expresses the retarding force (per unit area) from a wall in the layers of a fluid flowing next to the wall. It is defined as:

 

Where   is the dynamic viscosity,   the flow velocity and   the distance from the wall.

It is used, for example, in the description of arterial blood flow in which case which there is evidence that it affects the atherogenic process.[2]

Pure

Pure shear stress is related to pure shear strain, denoted γ, by the following equation:[3]

 

where G is the shear modulus of the isotropic material, given by

 

Here E is Young's modulus and ν is Poisson's ratio.

Beam shear

Beam shear is defined as the internal shear stress of a beam caused by the shear force applied to the beam.

 

where

f = total shear force at the location in question;
Q = statical moment of area;
b = thickness (width) in the material perpendicular to the shear;
I = moment of inertia of the entire cross-sectional area.

The beam shear formula is also known as Zhuravskii shear stress formula after Dmitrii Ivanovich Zhuravskii who derived it in 1855.[4][5]

Semi-monocoque shear

Shear stresses within a semi-monocoque structure may be calculated by idealizing the cross-section of the structure into a set of stringers (carrying only axial loads) and webs (carrying only shear flows). Dividing the shear flow by the thickness of a given portion of the semi-monocoque structure yields the shear stress. Thus, the maximum shear stress will occur either in the web of maximum shear flow or minimum thickness

Constructions in soil can also fail due to shear; e.g., the weight of an earth-filled dam or dike may cause the subsoil to collapse, like a small landslide.

Impact shear

The maximum shear stress created in a solid round bar subject to impact is given by the equation:

 

where

U = change in kinetic energy;
G = shear modulus;
V = volume of rod;

and

U = Urotating + Uapplied;
Urotating = 1/22;
Uapplied = displaced;
I = mass moment of inertia;
ω = angular speed.

Shear stress in fluids

Any real fluids (liquids and gases included) moving along a solid boundary will incur a shear stress at that boundary. The no-slip condition[6] dictates that the speed of the fluid at the boundary (relative to the boundary) is zero; although at some height from the boundary the flow speed must equal that of the fluid. The region between these two points is named the boundary layer. For all Newtonian fluids in laminar flow, the shear stress is proportional to the strain rate in the fluid, where the viscosity is the constant of proportionality. For non-Newtonian fluids, the viscosity is not constant. The shear stress is imparted onto the boundary as a result of this loss of velocity.

For a Newtonian fluid, the shear stress at a surface element parallel to a flat plate at the point y is given by:

 

where

μ is the dynamic viscosity of the flow;
u is the flow velocity along the boundary;
y is the height above the boundary.

Specifically, the wall shear stress is defined as:

 

Newton's constitutive law, for any general geometry (including the flat plate above mentioned), states that shear tensor (a second-order tensor) is proportional to the flow velocity gradient (the velocity is a vector, so its gradient is a second-order tensor):

 

and the constant of proportionality is named dynamic viscosity. For an isotropic Newtonian flow it is a scalar, while for anisotropic Newtonian flows it can be a second-order tensor too. The fundamental aspect is that for a Newtonian fluid the dynamic viscosity is independent on flow velocity (i.e., the shear stress constitutive law is linear), while non-Newtonian flows this is not true, and one should allow for the modification:

 

This no longer Newton's law but a generic tensorial identity: one can always find an expression of the viscosity as function of the flow velocity given any expression of the shear stress as function of the flow velocity. On the other hand, given a shear stress as function of the flow velocity, it represents a Newtonian flow only if it can be expressed as a constant for the gradient of the flow velocity. The constant one finds in this case is the dynamic viscosity of the flow.

Example

Considering a 2D space in cartesian coordinates (x,y) (the flow velocity components are respectively (u,v)), then the shear stress matrix given by:

 

represents a Newtonian flow, in fact it can be expressed as:

 ,

i.e., an anisotropic flow with the viscosity tensor:

 

which is nonuniform (depends on space coordinates) and transient, but relevantly it is independent on the flow velocity:

 

This flow is therefore newtonian. On the other hand, a flow in which the viscosity were:

 

is nonnewtonian since the viscosity depends on flow velocity. This nonnewtonian flow is isotropic (the matrix is proportional to the identity matrix), so the viscosity is simply a scalar:

 

Measurement with sensors

Diverging fringe shear stress sensor

This relationship can be exploited to measure the wall shear stress. If a sensor could directly measure the gradient of the velocity profile at the wall, then multiplying by the dynamic viscosity would yield the shear stress. Such a sensor was demonstrated by A. A. Naqwi and W. C. Reynolds.[7] The interference pattern generated by sending a beam of light through two parallel slits forms a network of linearly diverging fringes that seem to originate from the plane of the two slits (see double-slit experiment). As a particle in a fluid passes through the fringes, a receiver detects the reflection of the fringe pattern. The signal can be processed, and knowing the fringe angle, the height and velocity of the particle can be extrapolated. The measured value of wall velocity gradient is independent of the fluid properties and as a result does not require calibration. Recent advancements in the micro-optic fabrication technologies have made it possible to use integrated diffractive optical element to fabricate diverging fringe shear stress sensors usable both in air and liquid.[8]

Micro-pillar shear-stress sensor

A further measurement technique is that of slender wall-mounted micro-pillars made of the flexible polymer PDMS, which bend in reaction to the applying drag forces in the vicinity of the wall. The sensor thereby belongs to the indirect measurement principles relying on the relationship between near-wall velocity gradients and the local wall-shear stress.[9][10]

Electro-Diffusional method

The Electro-Diffusional method measures the wall shear rate in the liquid phase from microelectrode under limiting diffusion current condition. A potential difference between an anode of a broad surface (usually located far from the measuring area) and the small working electrode acting as a cathode leads to a fast redox reaction. The ion disappearance occurs only on the microprobe active surface, causing the development of the diffusion boundary layer, in which the fast electro-diffusion reaction rate is controlled only by diffusion. The resolution of the convective-diffusive equation in the near wall region of the microelectrode lead to analytical solutions relying the characteristics length of the micro-probes, the diffusional properties of the electrochemical solution and the wall shear rate.[11]

See also

References

  1. ^ Hibbeler, R.C. (2004). Mechanics of Materials. New Jersey USA: Pearson Education. p. 32. ISBN 0-13-191345-X.
  2. ^ Katritsis, Demosthenes (2007). "Wall Shear Stress: Theoretical Considerations and Methods of Measurement". Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases. 49 (5): 307–329. doi:10.1016/j.pcad.2006.11.001. PMID 17329179.
  3. ^ "Strength of Materials". Eformulae.com. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  4. ^ Лекция Формула Журавского [Zhuravskii's Formula]. Сопромат Лекции (in Russian). Retrieved 2014-02-26.
  5. ^ "Flexure of Beams" (PDF). Mechanical Engineering Lectures. McMaster University.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ Day, Michael A. (2004), "The no-slip condition of fluid dynamics", Erkenntnis, Springer Netherlands, 33 (3): 285–296, doi:10.1007/BF00717588, ISSN 0165-0106, S2CID 55186899.
  7. ^ Naqwi, A. A.; Reynolds, W. C. (Jan 1987), "Dual cylindrical wave laser-Doppler method for measurement of skin friction in fluid flow", NASA STI/Recon Technical Report N, 87
  8. ^ {microS Shear Stress Sensor, MSE}
  9. ^ Große, S.; Schröder, W. (2009), "Two-Dimensional Visualization of Turbulent Wall Shear Stress Using Micropillars", AIAA Journal, 47 (2): 314–321, Bibcode:2009AIAAJ..47..314G, doi:10.2514/1.36892
  10. ^ Große, S.; Schröder, W. (2008), "Dynamic Wall-Shear Stress Measurements in Turbulent Pipe Flow using the Micro-Pillar Sensor MPS3", International Journal of Heat and Fluid Flow, 29 (3): 830–840, doi:10.1016/j.ijheatfluidflow.2008.01.008
  11. ^ Havlica, J.; Kramolis, D.; Huchet, F. (2021), "A revisit of the electro-diffusional theory for the wall shear stress measurement" (PDF), International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 165: 120610, doi:10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2020.120610, S2CID 228876357

shear, stress, often, denoted, greek, component, stress, coplanar, with, material, cross, section, arises, from, shear, force, component, force, vector, parallel, material, cross, section, normal, stress, other, hand, arises, from, force, vector, component, pe. Shear stress often denoted by t Greek tau is the component of stress coplanar with a material cross section It arises from the shear force the component of force vector parallel to the material cross section Normal stress on the other hand arises from the force vector component perpendicular to the material cross section on which it acts Shear stressCommon symbolstSI unitpascalDerivations fromother quantitiest F AA shearing force is applied to the top of the rectangle while the bottom is held in place The resulting shear stress t deforms the rectangle into a parallelogram The area involved would be the top of the parallelogram Contents 1 General shear stress 2 Other forms 2 1 Wall shear stress 2 2 Pure 2 3 Beam shear 2 4 Semi monocoque shear 2 5 Impact shear 2 6 Shear stress in fluids 2 6 1 Example 3 Measurement with sensors 3 1 Diverging fringe shear stress sensor 3 2 Micro pillar shear stress sensor 3 3 Electro Diffusional method 4 See also 5 ReferencesGeneral shear stress EditThe formula to calculate average shear stress is force per unit area 1 t F A displaystyle tau F over A where t the shear stress F the force applied A the cross sectional area of material with area parallel to the applied force vector Other forms EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Wall shear stress Edit Wall shear stress expresses the retarding force per unit area from a wall in the layers of a fluid flowing next to the wall It is defined as t w m u y y 0 displaystyle tau w mu left frac partial u partial y right y 0 Where m displaystyle mu is the dynamic viscosity u displaystyle u the flow velocity and y displaystyle y the distance from the wall It is used for example in the description of arterial blood flow in which case which there is evidence that it affects the atherogenic process 2 Pure Edit Pure shear stress is related to pure shear strain denoted g by the following equation 3 t g G displaystyle tau gamma G where G is the shear modulus of the isotropic material given by G E 2 1 n displaystyle G frac E 2 1 nu Here E is Young s modulus and n is Poisson s ratio Beam shear Edit Beam shear is defined as the internal shear stress of a beam caused by the shear force applied to the beam t f Q I b displaystyle tau fQ over Ib where f total shear force at the location in question Q statical moment of area b thickness width in the material perpendicular to the shear I moment of inertia of the entire cross sectional area The beam shear formula is also known as Zhuravskii shear stress formula after Dmitrii Ivanovich Zhuravskii who derived it in 1855 4 5 Semi monocoque shear Edit Further information Shear flow Shear stresses within a semi monocoque structure may be calculated by idealizing the cross section of the structure into a set of stringers carrying only axial loads and webs carrying only shear flows Dividing the shear flow by the thickness of a given portion of the semi monocoque structure yields the shear stress Thus the maximum shear stress will occur either in the web of maximum shear flow or minimum thicknessConstructions in soil can also fail due to shear e g the weight of an earth filled dam or dike may cause the subsoil to collapse like a small landslide Impact shear Edit The maximum shear stress created in a solid round bar subject to impact is given by the equation t 2 U G V displaystyle tau sqrt 2UG over V where U change in kinetic energy G shear modulus V volume of rod and U Urotating Uapplied Urotating 1 2 Iw2 Uapplied T8displaced I mass moment of inertia w angular speed Shear stress in fluids Edit See also Viscosity Couette flow Hagen Poiseuille equation Depth slope product and Simple shear Any real fluids liquids and gases included moving along a solid boundary will incur a shear stress at that boundary The no slip condition 6 dictates that the speed of the fluid at the boundary relative to the boundary is zero although at some height from the boundary the flow speed must equal that of the fluid The region between these two points is named the boundary layer For all Newtonian fluids in laminar flow the shear stress is proportional to the strain rate in the fluid where the viscosity is the constant of proportionality For non Newtonian fluids the viscosity is not constant The shear stress is imparted onto the boundary as a result of this loss of velocity For a Newtonian fluid the shear stress at a surface element parallel to a flat plate at the point y is given by t y m u y displaystyle tau y mu frac partial u partial y where m is the dynamic viscosity of the flow u is the flow velocity along the boundary y is the height above the boundary Specifically the wall shear stress is defined as t w t y 0 m u y y 0 displaystyle tau mathrm w tau y 0 mu left frac partial u partial y right y 0 Newton s constitutive law for any general geometry including the flat plate above mentioned states that shear tensor a second order tensor is proportional to the flow velocity gradient the velocity is a vector so its gradient is a second order tensor t u m u displaystyle overset leftrightarrow tau vec u mu vec nabla vec u and the constant of proportionality is named dynamic viscosity For an isotropic Newtonian flow it is a scalar while for anisotropic Newtonian flows it can be a second order tensor too The fundamental aspect is that for a Newtonian fluid the dynamic viscosity is independent on flow velocity i e the shear stress constitutive law is linear while non Newtonian flows this is not true and one should allow for the modification t u m u u displaystyle overset leftrightarrow tau vec u mu vec u vec nabla vec u This no longer Newton s law but a generic tensorial identity one can always find an expression of the viscosity as function of the flow velocity given any expression of the shear stress as function of the flow velocity On the other hand given a shear stress as function of the flow velocity it represents a Newtonian flow only if it can be expressed as a constant for the gradient of the flow velocity The constant one finds in this case is the dynamic viscosity of the flow Example Edit Considering a 2D space in cartesian coordinates x y the flow velocity components are respectively u v then the shear stress matrix given by t x x t x y t y x t y y x u x 0 0 t v y displaystyle begin pmatrix tau xx amp tau xy tau yx amp tau yy end pmatrix begin pmatrix x frac partial u partial x amp 0 0 amp t frac partial v partial y end pmatrix represents a Newtonian flow in fact it can be expressed as t x x t x y t y x t y y x 0 0 t u x u y v x v y displaystyle begin pmatrix tau xx amp tau xy tau yx amp tau yy end pmatrix begin pmatrix x amp 0 0 amp t end pmatrix cdot begin pmatrix frac partial u partial x amp frac partial u partial y frac partial v partial x amp frac partial v partial y end pmatrix i e an anisotropic flow with the viscosity tensor m x x m x y m y x m y y x 0 0 t displaystyle begin pmatrix mu xx amp mu xy mu yx amp mu yy end pmatrix begin pmatrix x amp 0 0 amp t end pmatrix which is nonuniform depends on space coordinates and transient but relevantly it is independent on the flow velocity m x t x 0 0 t displaystyle overset leftrightarrow mu x t begin pmatrix x amp 0 0 amp t end pmatrix This flow is therefore newtonian On the other hand a flow in which the viscosity were m x x m x y m y x m y y 1 u 0 0 1 u displaystyle begin pmatrix mu xx amp mu xy mu yx amp mu yy end pmatrix begin pmatrix frac 1 u amp 0 0 amp frac 1 u end pmatrix is nonnewtonian since the viscosity depends on flow velocity This nonnewtonian flow is isotropic the matrix is proportional to the identity matrix so the viscosity is simply a scalar m u 1 u displaystyle mu u frac 1 u Measurement with sensors EditDiverging fringe shear stress sensor Edit This relationship can be exploited to measure the wall shear stress If a sensor could directly measure the gradient of the velocity profile at the wall then multiplying by the dynamic viscosity would yield the shear stress Such a sensor was demonstrated by A A Naqwi and W C Reynolds 7 The interference pattern generated by sending a beam of light through two parallel slits forms a network of linearly diverging fringes that seem to originate from the plane of the two slits see double slit experiment As a particle in a fluid passes through the fringes a receiver detects the reflection of the fringe pattern The signal can be processed and knowing the fringe angle the height and velocity of the particle can be extrapolated The measured value of wall velocity gradient is independent of the fluid properties and as a result does not require calibration Recent advancements in the micro optic fabrication technologies have made it possible to use integrated diffractive optical element to fabricate diverging fringe shear stress sensors usable both in air and liquid 8 Micro pillar shear stress sensor Edit A further measurement technique is that of slender wall mounted micro pillars made of the flexible polymer PDMS which bend in reaction to the applying drag forces in the vicinity of the wall The sensor thereby belongs to the indirect measurement principles relying on the relationship between near wall velocity gradients and the local wall shear stress 9 10 Electro Diffusional method Edit The Electro Diffusional method measures the wall shear rate in the liquid phase from microelectrode under limiting diffusion current condition A potential difference between an anode of a broad surface usually located far from the measuring area and the small working electrode acting as a cathode leads to a fast redox reaction The ion disappearance occurs only on the microprobe active surface causing the development of the diffusion boundary layer in which the fast electro diffusion reaction rate is controlled only by diffusion The resolution of the convective diffusive equation in the near wall region of the microelectrode lead to analytical solutions relying the characteristics length of the micro probes the diffusional properties of the electrochemical solution and the wall shear rate 11 See also EditCritical resolved shear stress Direct shear test Friction Shear and moment diagrams Shear rate Shear strain Shear strength Tensile stress Triaxial shear testReferences Edit Hibbeler R C 2004 Mechanics of Materials New Jersey USA Pearson Education p 32 ISBN 0 13 191345 X Katritsis Demosthenes 2007 Wall Shear Stress Theoretical Considerations and Methods of Measurement Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases 49 5 307 329 doi 10 1016 j pcad 2006 11 001 PMID 17329179 Strength of Materials Eformulae com Retrieved 24 December 2011 Lekciya Formula Zhuravskogo Zhuravskii s Formula Sopromat Lekcii in Russian Retrieved 2014 02 26 Flexure of Beams PDF Mechanical Engineering Lectures McMaster University permanent dead link Day Michael A 2004 The no slip condition of fluid dynamics Erkenntnis Springer Netherlands 33 3 285 296 doi 10 1007 BF00717588 ISSN 0165 0106 S2CID 55186899 Naqwi A A Reynolds W C Jan 1987 Dual cylindrical wave laser Doppler method for measurement of skin friction in fluid flow NASA STI Recon Technical Report N 87 microS Shear Stress Sensor MSE Grosse S Schroder W 2009 Two Dimensional Visualization of Turbulent Wall Shear Stress Using Micropillars AIAA Journal 47 2 314 321 Bibcode 2009AIAAJ 47 314G doi 10 2514 1 36892 Grosse S Schroder W 2008 Dynamic Wall Shear Stress Measurements in Turbulent Pipe Flow using the Micro Pillar Sensor MPS3 International Journal of Heat and Fluid Flow 29 3 830 840 doi 10 1016 j ijheatfluidflow 2008 01 008 Havlica J Kramolis D Huchet F 2021 A revisit of the electro diffusional theory for the wall shear stress measurement PDF International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer 165 120610 doi 10 1016 j ijheatmasstransfer 2020 120610 S2CID 228876357 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shear stress amp oldid 1127968089, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.