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Showing posts with label kinetics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kinetics. Show all posts

March 15, 2013

What are Constitutive Equations?

Physical laws of continuum mechanics are valid for any continuum. Constitutive equations are mathematical relationships between kinetics and kinematics quantities of a specific continuum (recall that a continuum is just a mathematical idealisation of a material). In other words, constitutive equations describe the behaviour of a material subjected to certain loading conditions.

Examples
Consider two analyses:
  1. With same loading conditions but using two different materials i.e. steel vs. aluminium
  2. With same material but test at two different temperatures i.e. room temperature vs. 1000ºC
In the above examples, the constitutive equations are responsible for the the followings
  1. Differing response for steel and aluminium under the same loading conditions
  2. In practice, a material is only described over a range of conditions it is expected to encounter. Therefore, constitutive equations are formulated to describe different response of the same material over an acceptable range i.e. two different sets of equations for 10-30ºC and 900-1200ºC temperature range for the above analysis

February 02, 2013

Kinetics vs. Kinematics

A summary of the differences between a kinematics and kinetics study.
Kinematics Kinetics
Study of Motion (Deformation and flow) Forces (Surface and body)
Considers Motion disregarding the forces and moments that cause the motion. Motion and the forces underlying this motion.

See also

February 01, 2013

What is Kinetics?


Whilst kinematics deals with the motion and deformation of a bodykinetics studies the forces that produce motion. The two types of forces are:
  1. Body forces (per unit mass or volume) are non-contact forces that act on the total mass of a continuum. Examples include gravitational force, electromagnetic force and inertial force.
  2. Surface forces (per unit area) are contact forces that act across an internal or external surface of a body. Examples include pressure, contact forces and frictional forces.
Figure. Magnetic (non-contact) vs. frictional (contact) forces. Images adapted from Newtown High School and Joey's Blog.