kelvin490 said:
For some metals and alloys the region of the true stress–strain curve from the
onset of plastic deformation to the point at which necking begins may be approximated
by σ=Kεn where n is strain hardening exponent. I wonder whether this equation can be applied to engineering stress-strain curve or just true stress-strain curve? The problem is engineering stress-strain curve would decrease after the point of ultimate stress because of necking, which does not occur in true stress-strain curve.
Great question.
Here is a good reference - http://books.google.com/books?id=jcD_K-WOS1kC&pg=PA128&lpg=PA128&dq=hollomon equation&source=bl&ots=EL4qurlmj2&sig=XNRhNsfgpF4tvoFwrawWSejMHv8&hl=en&sa=X&ei=Bq9eVNbbFsSBiwLMiYGIBw&ved=0CB0Q6AEwADgU#v=onepage&q=hollomon equation&f=false
Mechanical Properties of Engineered Materials - If one looks on pages 125-128, one will find a good discussion of true-stress/true-strain and engineering-stress/engineering-strain, and one sees two different mathematical relationships/curves.
It's also important to understand how to apply the 'Hollomon' equation - ## \sigma = K \epsilon^n ##
Here is another good reference - http://www.colorado.edu/engineering/CAS/courses.d/Structures.d/IAST.Lect05.d/IAST.Lect05.pdf
See also -
http://admet.com/testing-standards/astm-e646-testing/See also -
H. J. Kleemola, M. A. Nieminen
On the strain-hardening parameters of metals
Metallurgical Transactions
August 1974, Volume 5, Issue 8, pp 1863-1866
The Hollomon equation is one of several empirical relationships used to characterize ductility/formability of a metal. The relationship relates true-stress with true
plastic strain, not total strain which is elastic + plastic. There are a number of good questions in this forum on relating stress and strain for isotropic, anisotropic, orthotropic materials, so we probably should do a FAQ on the subject of mechanics of materials.
As dav2008 indicted, the testing tend to be uniaxial, and often for anisotropic/orthotropic materials, one will find uniaxial testing in two directions. Sometimes, testing will involve biaxial tests, e.g., pressurized tubes. Then one has to adapt the results to 'real' situations that can be biaxial or triaxial.
For most engineering applications, materials are used in the elastic range, with plenty of margin to YS. But there are transient situations, e.g., crashes, where materials must behave predictably under plastic deformation. And we haven't even touched on creep, which is a consideration in high temperature systems, such as power generation.