In some situations, the stress within a body may adequately be described by a single number, or by a single vector (a number and a direction). Three such
simple stress situations, that are often encountered in engineering design, are the
uniaxial normal stress, the
simple shear stress, and the
isotropic normal stress.
Uniaxial normal A common situation with a simple stress pattern is when a straight rod, with uniform material and cross section, is subjected to
tension by opposite forces of magnitude F along its axis. If the system is in
equilibrium and not changing with time, and the weight of the bar can be neglected, then through each transversal section of the bar the top part must pull on the bottom part with the same force,
F with continuity through the full cross-sectional area
, A. Therefore, the stress σ throughout the bar, across any horizontal surface, can be expressed simply by the single number σ, calculated simply with the magnitude of those forces,
F, and cross sectional area,
A.\sigma=\frac{F}{A} On the other hand, if one imagines the bar being cut along its length, parallel to the axis, there will be no force (hence no stress) between the two halves across the cut. This type of stress may be called (simple) normal stress or uniaxial stress; specifically, (uniaxial, simple, etc.) tensile stress. If the load is
compression on the bar, rather than stretching it, the analysis is the same except that the force
F and the stress \sigma change sign, and the stress is called compressive stress. This analysis assumes the stress is evenly distributed over the entire cross-section. In practice, depending on how the bar is attached at the ends and how it was manufactured, this assumption may not be valid. In that case, the value \sigma =
F/
A will be only the average stress, called
engineering stress or
nominal stress. If the bar's length
L is many times its diameter
D, and it has no gross defects or
built-in stress, then the stress can be assumed to be uniformly distributed over any cross-section that is more than a few times
D from both ends. (This observation is known as the
Saint-Venant's principle). Normal stress occurs in many other situations besides axial tension and compression. If an elastic bar with uniform and symmetric cross-section is bent in one of its planes of symmetry, the resulting
bending stress will still be normal (perpendicular to the cross-section), but will vary over the cross section: the outer part will be under tensile stress, while the inner part will be compressed. Another variant of normal stress is the
hoop stress that occurs on the walls of a cylindrical
pipe or
vessel filled with pressurized fluid.
Shear Another simple type of stress occurs when a uniformly thick layer of elastic material like glue or rubber is firmly attached to two stiff bodies that are pulled in opposite directions by forces parallel to the layer; or a section of a soft metal bar that is being cut by the jaws of a
scissors-like tool. Let
F be the magnitude of those forces, and
M be the midplane of that layer. Just as in the normal stress case, the part of the layer on one side of
M must pull the other part with the same force
F. Assuming that the direction of the forces is known, the stress across
M can be expressed simply by the single number \tau, calculated simply with the magnitude of those forces,
F and the cross sectional area,
A.\tau=\frac{F}{A}Unlike normal stress, this
simple shear stress is directed parallel to the cross-section considered, rather than perpendicular to it. For any plane
S that is perpendicular to the layer, the net internal force across
S, and hence the stress, will be zero. As in the case of an axially loaded bar, in practice the shear stress may not be uniformly distributed over the layer; so, as before, the ratio
F/
A will only be an average ("nominal", "engineering") stress. That average is often sufficient for practical purposes. Shear stress is observed also when a cylindrical bar such as a
shaft is subjected to opposite torques at its ends. In that case, the shear stress on each cross-section is parallel to the cross-section, but oriented tangentially relative to the axis, and increases with distance from the axis. Significant shear stress occurs in the middle plate (the "web") of
I-beams under bending loads, due to the web constraining the end plates ("flanges").
Isotropic Another simple type of stress occurs when the material body is under equal compression or tension in all directions. This is the case, for example, in a portion of liquid or gas at rest, whether enclosed in some container or as part of a larger mass of fluid; or inside a cube of elastic material that is being pressed or pulled on all six faces by equal perpendicular forces — provided, in both cases, that the material is homogeneous, without built-in stress, and that the effect of gravity and other external forces can be neglected. In these situations, the stress across any imaginary internal surface turns out to be equal in magnitude and always directed perpendicularly to the surface independently of the surface's orientation. This type of stress may be called
isotropic normal or just
isotropic; if it is compressive, it is called
hydrostatic pressure or just
pressure. Gases by definition cannot withstand tensile stresses, but some liquids may withstand very large amounts of isotropic tensile stress under some circumstances. see
Z-tube.
Cylinder Parts with
rotational symmetry, such as wheels, axles, pipes, and pillars, are very common in engineering. Often the stress patterns that occur in such parts have rotational or even
cylindrical symmetry. The analysis of such
cylinder stresses can take advantage of the symmetry to reduce the dimension of the domain and/or of the stress tensor. == General types ==