Class 11 Physics: Mechanical Properties of Solids Notes

Class 11 Physics: Mechanical Properties of Solids Notes


1. Introduction

  • Solids resist changes in shape and volume due to intermolecular forces.
  • Mechanical properties describe how solids deform under forces.

2. Stress

  • Definition: Force applied per unit area.

Stress=FA\text{Stress} = \frac{F}{A}Stress=AF​

Where:

  • FFF = applied force (N)
  • AAA = cross-sectional area (m²)

Types of Stress:

  1. Tensile stress: Pulling force
  2. Compressive stress: Pushing force
  3. Shear stress: Force tangential to the surface

3. Strain

  • Definition: Fractional deformation of a solid.

Strain=ΔLL(for length change)\text{Strain} = \frac{\Delta L}{L} \quad \text{(for length change)}Strain=LΔL​(for length change)

Where:

  • ΔL\Delta LΔL = change in length
  • LLL = original length

Types of Strain:

  1. Tensile/compressive strain: ΔLL\frac{\Delta L}{L}LΔL​
  2. Shear strain: angle of deformation(θ)\text{angle of deformation} \, (\theta)angle of deformation(θ)

4. Elasticity

  • Definition: Ability of a solid to regain its original shape after removing force.
  • Elastic limit: Maximum stress up to which solid returns to original shape.
  • Plastic deformation: Permanent change beyond elastic limit.

5. Hooke’s Law

  • Within the elastic limit:

FΔLorStressStrainF \propto \Delta L \quad \text{or} \quad \text{Stress} \propto \text{Strain}F∝ΔLorStress∝Strain

  • Mathematically:

σ=Yϵ\sigma = Y \epsilonσ=Yϵ

Where:

  • σ\sigmaσ = stress
  • ϵ\epsilonϵ = strain
  • YYY = Young’s modulus

6. Elastic Moduli

  1. Young’s Modulus (Y): Measures stiffness under tensile or compressive stress.

Y=Tensile StressTensile Strain=F/AΔL/LY = \frac{\text{Tensile Stress}}{\text{Tensile Strain}} = \frac{F/A}{\Delta L / L}Y=Tensile StrainTensile Stress​=ΔL/LF/A​

  1. Bulk Modulus (K): Measures resistance to uniform compression.

K=Hydrostatic PressureVolumetric Strain=ΔPΔV/VK = \frac{\text{Hydrostatic Pressure}}{\text{Volumetric Strain}} = -\frac{\Delta P}{\Delta V / V}K=Volumetric StrainHydrostatic Pressure​=−ΔV/VΔP​

  1. Shear Modulus (η): Measures resistance to shear stress.

η=Shear StressShear Strain=F/Atanθ\eta = \frac{\text{Shear Stress}}{\text{Shear Strain}} = \frac{F/A}{\tan \theta}η=Shear StrainShear Stress​=tanθF/A​


7. Relation Between Elastic Constants

For isotropic solids:Y=2η(1+σ),K=Y3(12σ)Y = 2 \eta (1 + \sigma), \quad K = \frac{Y}{3(1-2\sigma)}Y=2η(1+σ),K=3(1−2σ)Y​

Where σ\sigmaσ = Poisson’s ratio:σ=lateral strainlongitudinal strain\sigma = -\frac{\text{lateral strain}}{\text{longitudinal strain}}σ=−longitudinal strainlateral strain​


8. Stress-Strain Curve

  • Proportional limit: Up to which Hooke’s law is valid.
  • Elastic limit: Beyond which plastic deformation occurs.
  • Yield point: Stress at which plastic deformation starts.
  • Ultimate stress: Maximum stress before breaking.

9. Key Points

  • Solids resist both change in shape and change in volume.
  • Stress/Strain relations define elastic behavior.
  • Elastic moduli quantify stiffness of solids.
  • Hooke’s law is valid only within elastic limit.