, showing the relationship between
stress (force applied per unit area) and
strain or
deformation of a ductile metal In
solid mechanics, solids generally have three responses to
force, depending on the amount of force and the type of material: • They exhibit
elasticity—the ability to temporarily change shape, but return to the original shape when the pressure is removed. "Hardness" in the elastic range—a small temporary change in shape for a given force—is known as
stiffness in the case of a given object, or a high
elastic modulus in the case of a material. • They exhibit
plasticity—the ability to permanently change shape in response to the force, but remain in one piece. The
yield strength is the point at which elastic deformation gives way to plastic deformation. Deformation in the plastic range is non-linear, and is described by the
stress-strain curve. This response produces the observed properties of scratch and indentation hardness, as described and measured in materials science. Some materials exhibit both
elasticity and
viscosity when undergoing plastic deformation; this is called
viscoelasticity. • They
fracture—split into two or more pieces.
Strength is a measure of the extent of a material's elastic range, or elastic and plastic ranges together. This is quantified as
compressive strength,
shear strength,
tensile strength depending on the direction of the forces involved.
Ultimate strength is an engineering measure of the maximum load a part of a specific material and geometry can withstand.
Brittleness, in technical usage, is the tendency of a material to fracture with very little or no detectable plastic deformation beforehand. Thus in technical terms, a material can be both brittle and strong. In everyday usage "brittleness" usually refers to the tendency to fracture under a small amount of force, which exhibits both brittleness and a lack of strength (in the technical sense). For perfectly brittle materials, yield strength and ultimate strength are the same, because they do not experience detectable plastic deformation. The opposite of brittleness is
ductility. The
toughness of a material is the maximum amount of
energy it can absorb before fracturing, which is different from the amount of
force that can be applied. Toughness tends to be small for brittle materials, because elastic and plastic deformations allow materials to absorb large amounts of energy. Hardness increases with decreasing
particle size. This is known as the
Hall-Petch relationship. However, below a critical grain-size, hardness decreases with decreasing grain size. This is known as the inverse Hall-Petch effect. Hardness of a material to deformation is dependent on its microdurability or small-scale
shear modulus in any direction, not to any
rigidity or
stiffness properties such as its
bulk modulus or
Young's modulus. Stiffness is often confused for hardness. Some materials are stiffer than diamond (e.g.
osmium) but are not harder, and are prone to
spalling and flaking in squamose or acicular habits. == Mechanisms and theory ==