When an elastic material is deformed due to an external force, it experiences internal resistance to the deformation and restores it to its original state if the external force is no longer applied. There are various
elastic moduli, such as
Young's modulus, the
shear modulus, and the
bulk modulus, all of which are measures of the inherent elastic properties of a material as a resistance to deformation under an applied load. The various moduli apply to different kinds of deformation. For instance, Young's modulus applies to extension/compression of a body, whereas the shear modulus applies to its
shear. Young's modulus and shear modulus are only for solids, whereas the
bulk modulus is for solids, liquids, and gases. The elasticity of materials is described by a
stress–strain curve, which shows the relation between
stress (the average restorative internal
force per unit area) and
strain (the relative deformation). The curve is generally nonlinear, but it can (by use of a
Taylor series) be approximated as linear for sufficiently small deformations (in which higher-order terms are negligible). If the material is
isotropic, the linearized stress–strain relationship is called
Hooke's law, which is often presumed to apply up to the elastic limit for most metals or crystalline materials whereas
nonlinear elasticity is generally required to model large deformations of rubbery materials even in the elastic range. For even higher stresses, materials exhibit
plastic behavior, that is, they deform irreversibly and do not return to their original shape after stress is no longer applied. For rubber-like materials such as
elastomers, the slope of the stress–strain curve increases with stress, meaning that rubbers progressively become more difficult to stretch, while for most metals, the gradient decreases at very high stresses, meaning that they progressively become easier to stretch. Elasticity is not exhibited only by solids;
non-Newtonian fluids, such as
viscoelastic fluids, will also exhibit elasticity in certain conditions quantified by the
Deborah number. In response to a small, rapidly applied and removed strain, these fluids may deform and then return to their original shape. Under larger strains, or strains applied for longer periods of time, these fluids may start to flow like a
viscous liquid. Because the elasticity of a material is described in terms of a stress–strain relation, it is essential that the terms
stress and
strain be defined without ambiguity. Typically, two types of relation are considered. The first type deals with materials that are elastic only for small strains. The second deals with materials that are not limited to small strains. Clearly, the second type of relation is more general in the sense that it must include the first type as a special case. For small strains, the measure of stress that is used is the
Cauchy stress while the measure of strain that is used is the
infinitesimal strain tensor; the resulting (predicted) material behavior is termed
linear elasticity, which (for
isotropic media) is called the generalized
Hooke's law.
Cauchy elastic materials and
hypoelastic materials are models that extend Hooke's law to allow for the possibility of large rotations, large distortions, and intrinsic or induced
anisotropy. For more general situations, any of a number of
stress measures can be used, and it is generally desired (but not required) that the elastic stress–strain relation be phrased in terms of a
finite strain measure that is
work conjugate to the selected stress measure, i.e., the time integral of the inner product of the stress measure with the rate of the strain measure should be equal to the change in internal energy for any
adiabatic process that remains below the elastic limit. == Units ==