Hello Cosmossos!
Cosmossos said:
Hello
can someone please tell me the difference between stiffness and hardness
Sorry, don't know.
… and between strength and toughness?
Breaking strength (of a material) is force per area (stress) just before failure (in N/m
2)
Toughness (of a material) is energy per volume just before failure (in J/m
3).
But isn't energy = force times displacement, so energy per volume = force times displacement per volume = force times area? 1 J/m
3 = 1 N/m
2 ?
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
… 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. 
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.
