ezzieyguywuf
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In the 13th edition of the MERM companion problem books, question number 6 in chapter 51 (page 51-2) asks for the tensile load on a bolt that is holding a steel and aluminum plate when the temperature is raised 250 deg F. In the solution, one of the lines reads "The unrealized elongation of the bolt is:"
I don't understand this: how can the bolt have an "unrealized elongation" when its elongation was less than the total of the elongation of the aluminum and steel plates? It seems to me that instead it is the steel and aluminum plates that have "unrealized elongation".
With that being said, the balance of the solution does not make sense to me. I mean, I get what they're doing but I don't understand how the strain in the bolt can be calculated using this "unrealized elongation".
The closest I can get is that the thermal strain in the bolt must be equal to the sum of the thermal strain in the aluminum and steel plates. That being said, if the aluminum and steel plates have a total "unrealized elongation" of X, then the bolt must have an "equivalent unrealized elongation" of the same amount? i.e. the thermal strain Mohr's law should hold for the bolt even though it was allowed to fully elongate?
I don't understand this: how can the bolt have an "unrealized elongation" when its elongation was less than the total of the elongation of the aluminum and steel plates? It seems to me that instead it is the steel and aluminum plates that have "unrealized elongation".
With that being said, the balance of the solution does not make sense to me. I mean, I get what they're doing but I don't understand how the strain in the bolt can be calculated using this "unrealized elongation".
The closest I can get is that the thermal strain in the bolt must be equal to the sum of the thermal strain in the aluminum and steel plates. That being said, if the aluminum and steel plates have a total "unrealized elongation" of X, then the bolt must have an "equivalent unrealized elongation" of the same amount? i.e. the thermal strain Mohr's law should hold for the bolt even though it was allowed to fully elongate?