Understanding Poisson's Ratio and Restrained Cylinders

AI Thread Summary
Poisson's ratio, a material property, remains constant regardless of loading conditions, even when a cylinder is restrained in one direction. When internal pressure is applied to a restrained cylinder, it expands laterally but cannot displace vertically, leading to a situation where longitudinal strain is zero. This creates a dilemma in calculating Poisson's ratio, as it involves dividing lateral strain by zero. However, the fundamental property of the material does not change under typical loading conditions. In special cases, such as exotic materials, properties may vary, but for conventional materials in the elastic range, Poisson's ratio remains consistent.
Gaunt
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
Hey. I have a couple of questions about Poisson's ratio I hope you guys can answer.

If I have a cylinder made of, let's say steel. Steel has a Poisson's ratio of roughly 0.33. The cylinder is restrained in the vertical direction so no displacement can occur.

If I apply an internal pressure to the cylinder, it is going to expand laterally, but it can't in the vertical direction because it is restrained.

Seeing as the Poisson ratio is a ratio of lateral to longitudinal strains and the strain in the longitudinal direction will be zero, where does that leave the poisson ratio? If The longitudinal strain is zero, you cannot divide the lateral strain by zero!

Am I missing something?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Poissons ratio is a material property. Constraining the movement of a material does nothing to affect that,

In effect by constraining the ends, you are applying a load in tension to counter act the way the material would want to move if it were unconstrained. As you have two loads instead of one on the material very basic calculations will break down as you have combined loads.
 
Thanks for the quick reply.

So what you are saying is that regardless of loading conditions a material will always have the same poisson ratio?

Also, the ratio of strains in a loading situation as above wouldn't be Poisson's ratio then, would it?
 
Gaunt said:
Thanks for the quick reply.

So what you are saying is that regardless of loading conditions a material will always have the same poisson ratio?

Also, the ratio of strains in a loading situation as above wouldn't be Poisson's ratio then, would it?

This could open a can of worms depending on how detailed we get. As exotic materials can change properties, or even have negative poissons ratios.

In general for 'normal' materials loaded in the elastic range then yes. Loading conditions will not change material properties.
 
comparing a flat solar panel of area 2π r² and a hemisphere of the same area, the hemispherical solar panel would only occupy the area π r² of while the flat panel would occupy an entire 2π r² of land. wouldn't the hemispherical version have the same area of panel exposed to the sun, occupy less land space and can therefore increase the number of panels one land can have fitted? this would increase the power output proportionally as well. when I searched it up I wasn't satisfied with...
Back
Top