Understanding Poisson's Ratio Limits

AI Thread Summary
Poisson's ratio is limited to -1 to 0.5 due to the physical properties of materials and their behavior under stress. A ratio of 0.5 implies an incompressible material, which is not found in nature, while a ratio below -1 would suggest a material that expands laterally when compressed, which is also unphysical. Elasticity equations become undefined or singular at these limits, indicating that they cannot be applied to real materials. Some engineered materials exhibit negative Poisson's ratios, but these are exceptions rather than the norm. Understanding these limits is crucial for accurate modeling in material science and engineering.
clare*
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I'm doing A2 course work on properties of materials and have been looking at Youngs modulus, Bulk modulus, Poissons ratio and Shear stress strain etc.:rolleyes: Was wondering if any kind person would be able to explain why Poissons ratio has theoretical limits of -1 to 0.5? Have tried to search on the web but am confused by the answers I find! They don't seem very clear! :confused:
Thanks in advance,
Clare :smile:
 
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Yes. I've noticed it too when I dealt with structural engineering. Some Elasticity equations seem to break up when such poisson ratios are substituted. Surely you have taken a look at some denominators of the Elasticity equations and have realized of that.

Once upon a time.. :smile: I ask to my teacher about it. He said to me is impossible to find a material with such poisson ratios (I think a negative poisson ratio has no physical sense in fact), i.e. there is no material of poisson ratio of 0.5 in the Nature. Thus, the Elasticity Equations are given birth by the Nature, so that they cannot be used with any imaginary material.

It's like the adiabatic constant \gamma There are a lot of equations inside Fluid Mechanics that are singular for some value of gamma, but that value is not present in our environment.
 
mmmm, I have read that there are some materials with negative poissons ratios that are man made-some, weird types of foam for example...let me try and find the website that I saw it on. I realize that if poissons ratio=0.5 then K, the Bulk modulus will be infinite meaning the material is incompressible which obviously cannot be true. But its the -1 limit I'm struggling with! I found a site that said "A Possons ratio of greater than -1 must be required to ensure that K is greater than 0 and that the solid contracts under the influence of positive compressive stress" I may be being a bit thick here but could you explain it to me in a different way?? I don't really get it!
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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