Thank you for yoru reply, that kind of helps,I've been re-reading the chapter, I am going to quote something from the book:
Ashby's Material selection chapter 5 said:
. . .Figure 5.9 shows as before, the modulus E plotted against density p on log scales. The material indices E/p, E^1/2 / p and E^1/3 / p can be plotted onto the figure. The condition
E/p = C or taking logs:
Log(E) = Log(p) + Log(C)
is that C the coupling constant? and anyways, how do you find it? who specifies it?
this is what confuses me the most, AFAIK E and p are supposed to be undefined, given the fact that we are looking for some material (with no defined E and p), but that C, is that the performance metric? (which I don't even know how to get, I only know its the multiplication of all 3 functions)
P < f(F) * f(G) * f(M)
3 functions of Functional requirements (F), Geometric Parameters (G) and Material properties (M)
This book just introduces the constant C in that phrase i quoted, and it doesn't explain anything about it!
after introducing it out of nowhere, it shows this:
http://img841.imageshack.us/img841/8196/picture1ra.jpg
I mean. . . where did he get that the intercepts are 10^-3, 10^-2 and 10^-1 respectively?
and then it skips to:
"It is now eas to read off the subset materials that optimally maximize performance"
and I am like. . .0.o============= EXAMPLE FROM ASHBY ==============
some panel that can withstand stuff, fixed Area but free width (h):
we have that mass (m) = ALp
the bending stiffness must be at least S*
S= CEI/L^3 > S*
the 2nd moemnt of area:
I= 1/12 * bh^3
eliminate h since its our free variable (L and b are constraints)
so you get that m = <(12S*/Cb)^1/3> * <bL^2> * <(p/E^1/3)>
where each bracket <> is the previous functions f(F),f (G) and f(M) respectively
so, what now? I can't solve for f(M) since the mass is not known, actually the mass is what we want to reduce as much as possible, so its a variable that we are targetting, which since f(G) and f(F) are fully defined (I can actually get numbers from those) you can say that that equationr educes to
m = C * f(M)
where m and f(M) are still variables, so I can't really solve for f(M) so I can't get a material index that would satisfy the equation M = E/p or whatever otehr index, that M would be the C that Ashby introduced, but still how do I get it? I am not sure if I am making any sense. . .writing this just confuses me more :P