A
solid is a material that can support a substantial amount of
shearing force over a given time scale during a natural or industrial process or action. This is what distinguishes solids from
fluids, because fluids also support
normal forces which are those forces that are directed perpendicular to the material plane across from which they act and
normal stress is the
normal force per unit area of that material plane.
Shearing forces in contrast with
normal forces, act parallel rather than perpendicular to the material plane and the shearing force per unit area is called
shear stress. Therefore, solid mechanics examines the shear stress, deformation and the failure of solid materials and structures. The most common topics covered in solid mechanics include: •
stability of structures - examining whether structures can return to a given equilibrium after disturbance or partial/complete failure,
see Structure mechanics •
dynamical systems and chaos - dealing with mechanical systems highly sensitive to their given initial position •
thermomechanics - analyzing materials with models derived from principles of
thermodynamics •
biomechanics - solid mechanics applied to biological materials e.g. bones, heart tissue •
geomechanics - solid mechanics applied to geological materials e.g. ice, soil, rock •
vibrations of solids and structures - examining vibration and wave propagation from vibrating particles and structures i.e. vital in mechanical, civil, mining, aeronautical, maritime/marine, aerospace engineering •
fracture and damage mechanics - dealing with crack-growth mechanics in solid materials •
composite materials - solid mechanics applied to materials made up of more than one compound e.g.
reinforced plastics,
reinforced concrete,
fiber glass •
variational formulations and computational mechanics - numerical solutions to mathematical equations arising from various branches of solid mechanics e.g.
finite element method (FEM) •
experimental mechanics - design and analysis of experimental methods to examine the behavior of solid materials and structures ==Relationship to continuum mechanics==