Ncert ch9 Physics Class 11
Ncert ch9 Physics Class 11
Ncert ch9 Physics Class 11
9.1 INTRODUCTION
In Chapter 7, we studied the rotation of the bodies and then
realised that the motion of a body depends on how mass is
9.1 Introduction distributed within the body. We restricted ourselves to simpler
9.2 Elastic behaviour of solids situations of rigid bodies. A rigid body generally means a
9.3 Stress and strain hard solid object having a definite shape and size. But in
9.4 Hooke’s law reality, bodies can be stretched, compressed and bent. Even
9.5 Stress-strain curve the appreciably rigid steel bar can be deformed when a
9.6 Elastic moduli sufficiently large external force is applied on it. This means
9.7 Applications of elastic that solid bodies are not perfectly rigid.
behaviour of materials A solid has definite shape and size. In order to change (or
deform) the shape or size of a body, a force is required. If
Summary
you stretch a helical spring by gently pulling its ends, the
Points to ponder
length of the spring increases slightly. When you leave the
Exercises
ends of the spring, it regains its original size and shape. The
Additional exercises property of a body, by virtue of which it tends to regain its
original size and shape when the applied force is removed, is
known as elasticity and the deformation caused is known
as elastic deformation. However, if you apply force to a lump
of putty or mud, they have no gross tendency to regain their
previous shape, and they get permanently deformed. Such
substances are called plastic and this property is called
plasticity. Putty and mud are close to ideal plastics.
The elastic behaviour of materials plays an important role
in engineering design. For example, while designing a
building, knowledge of elastic properties of materials like steel,
concrete etc. is essential. The same is true in the design of
bridges, automobiles, ropeways etc. One could also ask —
Can we design an aeroplane which is very light but
sufficiently strong? Can we design an artificial limb which
is lighter but stronger? Why does a railway track have a
particular shape like I? Why is glass brittle while brass is
not? Answers to such questions begin with the study of how
relatively simple kinds of loads or forces act to deform
different solids bodies. In this chapter, we shall study the
232 PHYSICS
elastic behaviour and mechanical properties of elasticity, now called Hooke’s law. We shall
solids which would answer many such study about it in Section 9.4. This law, like
questions. Boyle’s law, is one of the earliest quantitative
relationships in science. It is very important to
9.2 ELASTIC BEHAVIOUR OF SOLIDS know the behaviour of the materials under
various kinds of load from the context of
We know that in a solid, each atom or molecule
engineering design.
is surrounded by neighbouring atoms or
molecules. These are bonded together by
9.3 STRESS AND STRAIN
interatomic or intermolecular forces and stay
in a stable equilibrium position. When a solid is When a force is applied on body, it is deformed
deformed, the atoms or molecules are displaced to a small or large extent depending upon the
from their equilibrium positions causing a nature of the material of the body and the
change in the interatomic (or intermolecular) magnitude of the defor ming force. The
distances. When the deforming force is removed, deformation may not be noticeable visually in
the interatomic forces tend to drive them back many materials but it is there. When a body is
to their original positions. Thus the body regains subjected to a deforming force, a restoring force
its original shape and size. The restoring is developed in the body. This restoring force is
mechanism can be visualised by taking a model equal in magnitude but opposite in direction to
of spring-ball system shown in the Fig. 9.1. Here the applied force. The restoring force per unit
the balls represent atoms and springs represent area is known as stress. If F is the force applied
interatomic forces. and A is the area of cross section of the
body,
Magnitude of the stress = F/A (9.1)
The SI unit of stress is N m–2 or pascal (Pa)
and its dimensional formula is [ ML–1T–2 ].
There are three ways in which a solid may
change its dimensions when an external force
acts on it. These are shown in Fig. 9.2. In
Fig.9.2(a), a cylinder is stretched by two equal
forces applied normal to its cross-sectional area.
The restoring force per unit area in this case
is called tensile stress. If the cylinder is
compressed under the action of applied forces,
the restoring force per unit area is known as
compressive stress. Tensile or compressive
stress can also be termed as longitudinal stress.
In both the cases, there is a change in the
length of the cylinder. The change in the length
ΔL to the original length L of the body (cylinder
Fig. 9.1 Spring-ball model for the illustration of elastic
in this case) is known as longitudinal strain.
behaviour of solids.
If you try to displace any ball from its
L
Longitudinal strain (9.2)
equilibrium position, the spring system tries to L
restore the ball back to its original position. Thus However, if two equal and opposite deforming
elastic behaviour of solids can be explained in forces are applied parallel to the cross-sectional
terms of microscopic nature of the solid. Robert area of the cylinder, as shown in Fig. 9.2(b),
Hooke, an English physicist (1635 - 1703 A.D) there is relative displacement between the
performed experiments on springs and found opposite faces of the cylinder. The restoring force
that the elongation (change in the length) per unit area developed due to the applied
produced in a body is proportional to the applied tangential force is known as tangential or
force or load. In 1676, he presented his law of shearing stress.
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF SOLIDS 233
Robert Hooke
(1635 – 1703 A.D.)
Robert Hooke was born on July 18, 1635 in Freshwater, Isle of Wight. He was
one of the most brilliant and versatile seventeenth century English scientists.
He attended Oxford University but never graduated. Yet he was an extremely
talented inventor, instrument-maker and building designer. He assisted Robert
Boyle in the construction of Boylean air pump. In 1662, he was appointed as
Curator of Experiments to the newly founded Royal Society. In 1665, he became
Professor of Geometry in Gresham College where he carried out his astronomi-
cal observations. He built a Gregorian reflecting telescope; discovered the fifth
star in the trapezium and an asterism in the constellation Orion; suggested that
Jupiter rotates on its axis; plotted detailed sketches of Mars which were later
used in the 19th century to determine the planet’s rate of rotation; stated the
inverse square law to describe planetary motion, which Newton modified later
etc. He was elected Fellow of Royal Society and also served as the Society’s
Secretary from 1667 to 1682. In his series of observations presented in Micrographia, he suggested
wave theory of light and first used the word ‘cell’ in a biological context as a result of his studies of cork.
Robert Hooke is best known to physicists for his discovery of law of elasticity: Ut tensio, sic vis (This
is a Latin expression and it means as the distortion, so the force). This law laid the basis for studies of
stress and strain and for understanding the elastic materials.
As a result of applied tangential force, there It can also be visualised, when a book is
is a relative displacement Δx between opposite pressed with the hand and pushed horizontally,
faces of the cylinder as shown in the Fig. 9.2(b). as shown in Fig. 9.2 (c).
The strain so produced is known as shearing Thus, shearing strain = tan θ ≈ θ (9.4)
strain and it is defined as the ratio of relative In Fig. 9.2 (d), a solid sphere placed in the
displacement of the faces Δx to the length of fluid under high pressure is compressed
the cylinder L. uniformly on all sides. The force applied by the
fluid acts in perpendicular direction at each
x point of the surface and the body is said to be
Shearing strain = tan θ (9.3) under hydraulic compression. This leads to
L
decrease in its volume without any change of
where θ is the angular displacement of the its geometrical shape.
cylinder from the vertical (original position of The body develops internal restoring forces
the cylinder). Usually θ is very small, tan θ that are equal and opposite to the forces applied
is nearly equal to angle θ , (if θ = 1 0 ° , for by the fluid (the body restores its original shape
example, there is only 1% difference between θ and size when taken out from the fluid). The
and tan θ ). internal restoring force per unit area in this case
Fig. 9.2 (a) Cylinder subjected to tensile stress stretches it by an amount ΔL. (b) A cylinder subjected to
shearing (tangential) stress deforms by an angle θ .(c) A book subjected to a shearing stress
(d) A solid sphere subjected to a uniform hydraulic stress shrinks in volume by an amount ΔV.
234 PHYSICS
is known as hydraulic stress and in magnitude The body regains its original dimensions when
is equal to the hydraulic pressure (applied force the applied force is removed. In this region, the
per unit area). solid behaves as an elastic body.
The strain produced by a hydraulic pressure
is called volume strain and is defined as the
ratio of change in volume (ΔV) to the original
volume (V ).
V
Volume strain (9.5)
V
Since the strain is a ratio of change in
dimension to the original dimension, it has no
units or dimensional formula.
Y= (9.7)
Y = (F/A)/(ΔL/L)
= (F × L) /(A × ΔL) (9.8)
Fig. 9.4 Stress-strain curve for the elastic tissue of Since strain is a dimensionless quantity, the
Aorta, the large tube (vessel) carrying blood unit of Young’s modulus is the same as that of
from the heart. stress i.e., N m–2 or Pascal (Pa). Table 9.1 gives
the values of Young’s moduli and yield strengths
does not obey Hooke’s law over most of the
of some materials.
region. Secondly, there is no well defined plastic
From the data given in Table 9.1, it is noticed
region. Substances like tissue of aorta, rubber
that for metals Young’s moduli are large.
etc. which can be stretched to cause large strains
Therefore, these materials require a large force
are called elastomers.
to produce small change in length. To increase
the length of a thin steel wire of 0.1 cm2 cross-
9.6 ELASTIC MODULI
sectional area by 0.1%, a force of 2000 N is
The proportional region within the elastic limit required. The force required to produce the same
of the stress-strain curve (region OA in Fig. 9.3) strain in aluminium, brass and copper wires
is of great importance for structural and having the same cross-sectional area are 690 N,
manufacturing engineering designs. The ratio 900 N and 1100 N respectively. It means that
of stress and strain, called modulus of elasticity, steel is more elastic than copper, brass and
is found to be a characteristic of the material. aluminium. It is for this reason that steel is
preferred in heavy-duty machines and in where the subscripts c and s refer to copper
structural designs. Wood, bone, concrete and and stainless steel respectively. Or,
glass have rather small Young’s moduli. ΔLc/ΔLs = (Ys/Yc) × (Lc/Ls)
Given Lc = 2.2 m, Ls = 1.6 m,
u Example 9.1 A structural steel rod has a From Table 9.1 Yc = 1.1 × 1011 N.m–2, and
radius of 10 mm and a length of 1.0 m. A Ys = 2.0 × 1011 N.m–2.
100 kN force stretches it along its length. ΔLc/ΔLs = (2.0 × 10 /1.1 × 1011) × (2.2/1.6) = 2.5.
11
Calculate (a) stress, (b) elongation, and (c) The total elongation is given to be
strain on the rod. Young’s modulus, of ΔLc + ΔLs = 7.0 × 10-4 m
structural steel is 2.0 × 1011 N m-2. Solving the above equations,
ΔLc = 5.0 × 10-4 m, and ΔLs = 2.0 × 10-4 m.
Answer We assume that the rod is held by a Therefore
clamp at one end, and the force F is applied at W = (A × Yc × ΔLc)/Lc
the other end, parallel to the length of the rod. = π (1.5 × 10-3)2 × [(5.0 × 10-4 × 1.1 × 1011)/2.2]
Then the stress on the rod is given by = 1.8 × 102 N t
F F
Stress = = 2
u Example 9.3 In a human pyramid in a
A πr circus, the entire weight of the balanced
3 group is supported by the legs of a
100 10 N
performer who is lying on his back (as
2
2 shown in Fig. 9.5). The combined mass of
3.14 10 m
all the persons performing the act, and the
= 3.18 × 108 N m–2 tables, plaques etc. involved is 280 kg. The
The elongation, mass of the performer lying on his back at
( F/A ) L the bottom of the pyramid is 60 kg. Each
ΔL =
Y thighbone (femur) of this performer has a
length of 50 cm and an effective radius of
8 –2 2.0 cm. Determine the amount by which
3.18 10 N m 1m each thighbone gets compressed under the
= 11 –2 extra load.
2 10 Nm
= 1.59 × 10–3 m
= 1.59 mm
The strain is given by
Strain = ΔL/L
= (1.59 × 10–3 m)/(1m)
= 1.59 × 10–3
= 0.16 % t
Answer Total mass of all the performers, will be accompanied by an equal change in
tables, plaques etc. = 280 kg experimental wire. (We shall study these
Mass of the performer = 60 kg temperature effects in detail in Chapter 11.)
Mass supported by the legs of the performer
at the bottom of the pyramid
= 280 – 60 = 220 kg
Weight of this supported mass
= 220 kg wt. = 220 × 9.8 N = 2156 N.
Weight supported by each thighbone of the
performer = ½ (2156) N = 1078 N.
From Table 9.1, the Young’s modulus for bone
is given by
Y = 9.4 × 109 N m–2.
Length of each thighbone L = 0.5 m
the radius of thighbone = 2.0 cm
Thus the cross-sectional area of the thighbone
A = π × (2 × 10-2)2 m2 = 1.26 × 10-3 m2.
Using Eq. (9.8), the compression in each
thighbone (ΔL) can be computed as
ΔL = [(F × L)/(Y × A)]
= [(1078 × 0.5)/(9.4 × 109 × 1.26 × 10-3)]
= 4.55 × 10-5 m or 4.55 × 10-3 cm.
This is a very small change! The fractional
decrease in the thighbone is ΔL/L = 0.000091
or 0.0091%. t
Table 9.3 Bulk moduli (B) of some common large compressibilities, which vary with pressure
Materials and temperature. The incompressibility of the
solids is primarily due to the tight coupling
Material B (109 N m–2 or GPa) between the neighbouring atoms. The molecules
Solids in liquids are also bound with their neighbours
Aluminium 72 but not as strong as in solids. Molecules in gases
Brass 61 are very poorly coupled to their neighbours.
Table 9.4 shows the various types of stress,
Copper 140
strain, elastic moduli, and the applicable state
Glass 37 of matter at a glance.
Iron 100
Nickel 260 u Example 9.5 The average depth of Indian
Ocean is about 3000 m. Calculate the
Steel 160
fractional compression, ΔV/V, of water at
Liquids the bottom of the ocean, given that the bulk
Water 2.2 modulus of water is 2.2 × 109 N m–2. (Take
Ethanol 0.9 g = 10 m s–2)
Carbon disulphide 1.56
Answer The pressure exerted by a 3000 m
Glycerine 4.76
column of water on the bottom layer
Mercury 25
p = hρ g = 3000 m × 1000 kg m–3 × 10 m s–2
Gases
= 3 × 107 kg m–1 s-2
Air (at STP) 1.0 × 10–4 = 3 × 107 N m–2
Thus solids are least compressible whereas gases Fractional compression ΔV/V, is
are most compressible. Gases are about a million ΔV/V = stress/B = (3 × 107 N m-2)/(2.2 × 109 N m–2)
times more compressible than solids! Gases have = 1.36 × 10-2 or 1.36 % t
Shearing Two equal and Pure shear, θ Yes No G = (F×θ)/A Shear Solid
opposite forces modulus
parallel to oppoiste
surfaces [forces
in each case such
that total force and
total torque on the
body vanishes
(σs = F/A)
Hydraulic Forces perpendicular Volume change No Yes B = –p/(ΔV/V) Bulk Solid, liquid
everywhere to the (compression or modulus and gas
surface, force per unit elongation
area (pressure) same (ΔV/V)
everywhere.
240 PHYSICS
Use of pillars or columns is also very common The answer to the question why the maximum
in buildings and bridges. A pillar with rounded height of a mountain on earth is ~10 km can
ends as shown in Fig. 9.10(a) supports less load also be provided by considering the elastic
than that with a distributed shape at the ends properties of rocks. A mountain base is not
[Fig. 9.10(b)]. The precise design of a bridge under uniform compression and this provides
or a building has to take into account some shearing stress to the rocks under which
the conditions under which it will function, the they can flow. The stress due to all the material
cost and long period, reliability of usable on the top should be less than the critical
materials etc. shearing stress at which the rocks flow.
At the bottom of a mountain of height h, the
force per unit area due to the weight of the
mountain is hρ g where ρ is the density of the
material of the mountain and g is the
acceleration due to gravity. The material at the
bottom experiences this force in the vertical
direction, and the sides of the mountain are free.
Therefore this is not a case of pressure or bulk
compression. There is a shear component,
approximately hρ g itself. Now the elastic limit
for a typical rock is 30 × 107 N m-2. Equating
this to hρ g, with ρ = 3 × 103 kg m-3 gives
(a) (b) hρ g = 30 × 107 N m-2 . Or
Fig. 9.10 Pillars or columns: (a) a pillar with h = 30 × 107 N m-2/(3 × 103 kg m-3 × 10 m s-2)
rounded ends, (b) Pillar with distributed = 10 km
ends. which is more than the height of Mt. Everest!
SUMMARY
1. Stress is the restoring force per unit area and strain is the fractional change in dimension.
In general there are three types of stresses (a) tensile stress — longitudinal stress
(associated with stretching) or compressive stress (associated with compression),
(b) shearing stress, and (c) hydraulic stress.
2. For small deformations, stress is directly proportional to the strain for many materials.
This is known as Hooke’s law. The constant of proportionality is called modulus of
elasticity. Three elastic moduli viz., Young’s modulus, shear modulus and bulk modulus
are used to describe the elastic behaviour of objects as they respond to deforming
forces that act on them.
A class of solids called elastomers does not obey Hooke’s law.
3. When an object is under tension or compression, the Hooke’s law takes the form
F/A = YΔL/L
where ΔL/L is the tensile or compressive strain of the object, F is the magnitude of the
applied force causing the strain, A is the cross-sectional area over which F is applied
(perpendicular to A) and Y is the Young’s modulus for the object. The stress is F/A.
4. A pair of forces when applied parallel to the upper and lower faces, the solid deforms so
that the upper face moves sideways with respect to the lower. The horizontal
displacement ΔL of the upper face is perpendicular to the vertical height L. This type of
deformation is called shear and the corresponding stress is the shearing stress. This
type of stress is possible only in solids.
In this kind of deformation the Hooke’s law takes the form
F/A = G × ΔL/L
where ΔL is the displacement of one end of object in the direction of the applied force F,
and G is the shear modulus.
242 PHYSICS
POINTS TO PONDER
1. In the case of a wire, suspended from celing and stretched under the action of a weight
(F) suspended from its other end, the force exerted by the ceiling on it is equal and
opposite to the weight. However, the tension at any cross-section A of the wire is just F
and not 2F. Hence, tensile stress which is equal to the tension per unit area is equal to
F/A.
2. Hooke’s law is valid only in the linear part of stress-strain curve.
3. The Young’s modulus and shear modulus are relevant only for solids since only solids
have lengths and shapes.
4. Bulk modulus is relevant for solids, liquid and gases. It refers to the change in volume
when every part of the body is under the uniform stress so that the shape of the body
remains unchanged.
5. Metals have larger values of Young’s modulus than alloys and elastomers. A material
with large value of Young’s modulus requires a large force to produce small changes in
its length.
6. In daily life, we feel that a material which stretches more is more elastic, but it a is
misnomer. In fact material which stretches to a lesser extent for a given load is considered
to be more elastic.
7. In general, a deforming force in one direction can produce strains in other directions
also. The proportionality between stress and strain in such situations cannot be described
by just one elastic constant. For example, for a wire under longitudinal strain, the
lateral dimensions (radius of cross section) will undergo a small change, which is described
by another elastic constant of the material (called Poisson ratio).
8. Stress is not a vector quantity since, unlike a force, the stress cannot be assigned a
specific direction. Force acting on the portion of a body on a specified side of a section
has a definite direction.
EXERCISES
9.1 A steel wire of length 4.7 m and cross-sectional area 3.0 × 10-5 m2 stretches by the
same amount as a copper wire of length 3.5 m and cross-sectional area of 4.0 × 10–5 m2
under a given load. What is the ratio of the Young’s modulus of steel to that of copper?
9.2 Figure 9.11 shows the strain-stress curve for a given material. What are (a) Young’s
modulus and (b) approximate yield strength for this material?
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF SOLIDS 243
Fig. 9.11
9.3 The stress-strain graphs for materials A and B are shown in Fig. 9.12.
Fig. 9.12
The graphs are drawn to the same scale.
(a) Which of the materials has the greater Young’s modulus?
(b) Which of the two is the stronger material?
9.4 Read the following two statements below carefully and state, with reasons, if it is true
or false.
(a) The Young’s modulus of rubber is greater than that of steel;
(b) The stretching of a coil is determined by its shear modulus.
9.5 Two wires of diameter 0.25 cm, one made of steel and the other made of brass are
loaded as shown in Fig. 9.13. The unloaded length of steel wire is 1.5 m and that of
brass wire is 1.0 m. Compute the elongations of the steel and the brass wires.
Fig. 9.13
244 PHYSICS
9.6 The edge of an aluminium cube is 10 cm long. One face of the cube is firmly fixed to a
vertical wall. A mass of 100 kg is then attached to the opposite face of the cube. The
shear modulus of aluminium is 25 GPa. What is the vertical deflection of this face?
9.7 Four identical hollow cylindrical columns of mild steel support a big structure of mass
50,000 kg. The inner and outer radii of each column are 30 and 60 cm respectively.
Assuming the load distribution to be uniform, calculate the compressional strain of
each column.
9.8 A piece of copper having a rectangular cross-section of 15.2 mm × 19.1 mm is pulled in
tension with 44,500 N force, producing only elastic deformation. Calculate the resulting
strain?
9.9 A steel cable with a radius of 1.5 cm supports a chairlift at a ski area. If the maximum
stress is not to exceed 108 N m–2, what is the maximum load the cable can support ?
9.10 A rigid bar of mass 15 kg is supported symmetrically by three wires each 2.0 m long.
Those at each end are of copper and the middle one is of iron. Determine the ratios of
their diameters if each is to have the same tension.
9.11 A 14.5 kg mass, fastened to the end of a steel wire of unstretched length 1.0 m, is
whirled in a vertical circle with an angular velocity of 2 rev/s at the bottom of the circle.
The cross-sectional area of the wire is 0.065 cm2. Calculate the elongation of the wire
when the mass is at the lowest point of its path.
9.12 Compute the bulk modulus of water from the following data: Initial volume = 100.0
litre, Pressure increase = 100.0 atm (1 atm = 1.013 × 105 Pa), Final volume = 100.5
litre. Compare the bulk modulus of water with that of air (at constant temperature).
Explain in simple terms why the ratio is so large.
9.13 What is the density of water at a depth where pressure is 80.0 atm, given that its
density at the surface is 1.03 × 103 kg m–3?
9.14 Compute the fractional change in volume of a glass slab, when subjected to a hydraulic
pressure of 10 atm.
9.15 Determine the volume contraction of a solid copper cube, 10 cm on an edge, when
subjected to a hydraulic pressure of 7.0 × 106 Pa.
9.16 How much should the pressure on a litre of water be changed to compress it by 0.10%?
Additional Exercises
9.17 Anvils made of single crystals of diamond, with the shape as shown in
Fig. 9.14, are used to investigate behaviour of materials under very high pressures.
Flat faces at the narrow end of the anvil have a diameter of 0.50 mm, and the wide ends
are subjected to a compressional force of 50,000 N. What is the pressure at the tip of
the anvil?
Fig. 9.14
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF SOLIDS 245
9.18 A rod of length 1.05 m having negligible mass is supported at its ends by two wires of
steel (wire A) and aluminium (wire B) of equal lengths as shown in
Fig. 9.15. The cross-sectional areas of wires A and B are 1.0 mm2 and 2.0 mm2,
respectively. At what point along the rod should a mass m be suspended in order to
produce (a) equal stresses and (b) equal strains in both steel and aluminium wires.
Fig. 9.15
9.19 A mild steel wire of length 1.0 m and cross-sectional area 0.50 × 10-2 cm2 is
stretched, well within its elastic limit, horizontally between two pillars. A mass of 100
g is suspended from the mid-point of the wire. Calculate the depression at the mid-
point.
9.20 Two strips of metal are riveted together at their ends by four rivets, each of diameter
6.0 mm. What is the maximum tension that can be exerted by the riveted strip if the
shearing stress on the rivet is not to exceed 6.9 × 107 Pa? Assume that each rivet is to
carry one quarter of the load.
9.21 The Marina trench is located in the Pacific Ocean, and at one place it is nearly eleven
km beneath the surface of water. The water pressure at the bottom of the trench is
about 1.1 × 108 Pa. A steel ball of initial volume 0.32 m3 is dropped into the ocean and
falls to the bottom of the trench. What is the change in the volume of the ball when it
reaches to the bottom?