Difficulty: Medium
Correct Answer: Compressive
Explanation:
Introduction / Context:Temperature changes in composite members cause self-equilibrating thermal stresses when free expansion is restrained. Understanding the sign of thermal stress in each material is essential for safe composite design.
Given Data / Assumptions:
Concept / Approach:Free thermal strain for each material is epsilon_free = α * ΔT. Because α_cu > α_steel, copper wants to expand more than steel. Bonding enforces equal total strain, so copper is forced to expand less than it would freely → copper experiences compressive mechanical strain; steel is forced to expand more than freely → tensile mechanical strain.
Step-by-Step Solution:
Compute free strains: ε_cu_free = α_cu * ΔT, ε_st_free = α_st * ΔT.Compatibility: ε_cu_total = ε_st_total.Mechanical strains: ε_mech = ε_total − ε_free.Since ε_cu_free > ε_total, copper’s ε_mech is negative → compression; steel’s ε_mech is positive → tension.Verification / Alternative check:Force equilibrium requires internal compressive force in copper to balance tensile force in steel. Analytical solution yields sigma_cu = − (E_cu * E_st / (E_cu A_cu + E_st A_st)) * (α_cu − α_st) * ΔT * A_st in compression (sign negative).
Why Other Options Are Wrong:Tensile/Zero/Shear: contradict thermal compatibility and equilibrium for α_cu > α_steel.“Depends only on cross-section” is false; coefficients of expansion are decisive.
Common Pitfalls:Assuming no stress appears under uniform heating; ignoring restraint due to bonding; mixing sign convention for tension/compression.
Final Answer:
Compressive
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