Elastic modulus or Young's modulus

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the elastic modulus in tensile and bending tests, highlighting the formulas used to calculate it. The elastic modulus is presented as an inherent property of metals, attributed to the isotropic nature of metallic bonds, which remain consistent regardless of specimen size. It is emphasized that elastic modulus is independent of the applied force and specimen dimensions, meaning it is a material property rather than a geometric one. While there is a belief that the elastic modulus may vary with specimen size, the consensus is that it remains constant for a given material, as demonstrated through experimental validation in both tensile and bending tests. The conversation concludes with a reiteration of the idea that elastic modulus is a fundamental characteristic of the material itself.
iliad
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I have a question

Elastic modulus in Tensile test
E = L*F / A*△L


Elastic modulus in bending test
E = F*L^3 / 4*w*t^3*D


I think Elastic modulus is changed by size of specimen.

I don't know why Elastic modulus is inherent propertie of metal??
 
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Elastic modulus is actually the elastic strain borne the atomic bonds. Since bonds in metals (metallic bonds) are isotropic (uniform) therefore elastic modulus remains the same regardless of the size of the object. Properties beyond the elastic limit however are transitive depending on different factors like grain size, microstructure constituents etc.
 
If you were to actually do a tension test for a particular material that obeys Hooke's Law, and then plug in the ΔL measured, experimentally, into your first formula -- you would find that "E" is constant. In other words, "E" is independent of your applied force, F, as well as the dimensions of your specimen: L and A. "E" can therefore be said to be a property of material only (not geometry!).

Similarly, if you were to do a three point bend test for that same material, and then plug in the deflection (D) measured, experimentally, into your second formula -- you would find that "E" is the same as before. "E" is again independent of the applied force, F, as well as the dimensions of your beam specimen: L, w, and t.
iliad said:
I think Elastic modulus is changed by size of specimen.

Nope.
iliad said:
I don't know why Elastic modulus is inherent property of metal??

What MalliCk said.Hope that helps..
 
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