Stiffness and hardness , strength and toughness

AI Thread Summary
Stiffness refers to a material's resistance to elastic deformation, while hardness indicates its resistance to permanent deformation. Strength is defined as the maximum stress a material can withstand before failure, whereas toughness measures the energy a material can absorb before failing. The relationship between these properties is illustrated through stress-strain curves, which show how materials behave under load. Brittle materials exhibit high strength but low toughness, failing quickly after the elastic region. Understanding these distinctions is crucial for material selection in engineering applications.
Cosmossos
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Hello
can someone please tell me the difference between stiffness and hardness and between strength and toughness?

thanks
 
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Hello Cosmossos! :smile:
Cosmossos said:
Hello
can someone please tell me the difference between stiffness and hardness

Sorry, don't know. :redface:
… and between strength and toughness?

Breaking strength (of a material) is force per area (stress) just before failure (in N/m2)

Toughness (of a material) is energy per volume just before failure (in J/m3).

But isn't energy = force times displacement, so energy per volume = force times displacement per volume = force times area? 1 J/m3 = 1 N/m2 ? :confused:

Yeees, but energy is the integral of force times displacement, so the total energy (per volume) absorbed by the material before failure depends on the shape of the force-displacement (per volume) curve (more usually called the strain-stress curve)

(strain = ∫ displacement per thickness = ∫ displacement times area per volume,
and stress = force per area,
so strain-stress = ∫ force times displacement per volume = energy per volume)​

For good examples of stress-strain curves, see http://www.etomica.org/app/modules/sites/MaterialFracture/Images/SSPicture2.jpg"
on the page http://www.etomica.org/app/modules/sites/MaterialFracture/Background1.html" …

the linear part is the elastic region, where energy per volume is proportional to force per area, the non-linear (curved) part is the plastic region (the ductile region, if we're talking about tension), and it ends at failure …

the total energy absorbed by the material (the area under the graph) depends on the shape of that non-linear part.

(it curves down at the end because of the difference between apparent stress and actual stress … the actual stress-strain curve keeps going up :rolleyes: … see http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f1/Stress_v_strain_A36_2.svg/300px-Stress_v_strain_A36_2.svg.png" )

Brittle materials are strong but not tough … they fail almost immediately after the end of the linear part. :redface:

Yield strength (of a material) is force per area at the top of the linear part.

If we bothered to define yield toughness (of a material), it would be energy per volume at the top of the linear part, but that would simply be proportional to yield strength, so we don't bother. :wink:
 
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Stiffness and hardness are resistance to elastic (temporary) and plastic (permanent) deformation, respectively.
 
thank you very much !
 
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