Calculating Potential Energy Stored in Compressed Abductin

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the potential energy stored in the elastic material abductin when compressed. The formula for potential energy due to compression is U = F ΔL / 2, where ΔL is the compression distance. Participants clarify the necessary parameters, including the elastic modulus and cross-sectional area, correcting the area to 0.00005 m². The final calculation for potential energy, after adjustments, results in E = 0.167 N*m. Accurate understanding of displacement and units is crucial for solving the problem effectively.
needhelp83
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A scallop forces open its shell with an elastic material called abductin, whose elastic modulus is about 2.0 x 106 N/m2. If this piece of abductin is 3.0 mm thick and has a cross-sectional area of .5 cm2, how much potential energy does it store when compressed 1.0 mm?

I have no idea how to solve for the potential energy when compressed. How would i do this?
 
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Does this help?
 
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The potential energy due to compression equals U = \frac{F \Delta L}{2}, where \Delta L is the length of compression. You only have to find the force F now from the relation \Delta L = \frac{F L }{EA}. If I understood the problem right, 'thick' does represent some kind of length here, so it equals L (?).

Edit: basically, this is the same what rsk wrote, if \lambda is the module of elasticity E, and E the potential energy U. :smile:
 
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How about this...

displacement=3-1 mm=2 mm

E=(lamda)Ax^2/2l
E=(2000000 n/m^2)(0.005 m)(0.002 m)^2 / 2(0.003 m)= 6.67

This is a shot! Does anybody else agree?
 
needhelp83 said:
How about this...
E=(2000000 n/m^2)(0.005 m)(0.002 m)^2 / 2(0.003 m)= 6.67

5cm^2 is 0.0005 m^2 I think. Also why do you have 0.002 for x? Isn't it 0.001?
 
I was thinking the displacement was the uncompressed abductin- the compressed abductin
 
needhelp83 said:
I was thinking the displacement was the uncompressed abductin- the compressed abductin

The displacement x states the amount of compression. Correct your numbers (as rsk suggested), and this should work just fine.
 
Ahh.. okay

E=(2000000 n/m^2)(0.0005 m^2)(0.001 m)^2 / 2(0.003 m)= 0.167 N*m

Here we go
 
The cross sectional area is 0.5 cm^2 and not 5 cm^2 (according to the text of the problem). So, 0.5 cm^2 = 0.00005 m^2.
 
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