Common Mistakes When Using Mohr’s Circle 2D (and How to Avoid Them)

Mohr’s Circle 2D Worked Examples: From Stress Components to Principal Values

Mohr’s Circle is a graphical method that makes stress transformation intuitive and helps find principal stresses and maximum shear stress for a 2D stress state. Below are concise worked examples that take you from given stress components to principal stresses, orientations, and maximum shear.

Key formulas (2D plane stress)

  • Normal and shear stresses on an arbitrary plane at angle θ:
    σn = (σx + σy)/2 + (σx – σy)/2cos(2θ) + τxy * sin(2θ)
    τn = −(σx – σy)/2 * sin(2θ) + τxy * cos(2θ)
  • Principal stresses (σ1, σ2):
    σavg = (σx + σy)/2
    R = sqrt(((σx – σy)/2)^2 + τxy^2)
    σ1 = σavg + R
    σ2 = σavg − R
  • Maximum in-plane shear stress:
    τmax = R
  • Principal plane angle (θp) measured from x-axis to principal plane:
    tan(2θp) = 2τxy / (σx − σy)

Example 1 — Tension/compression with shear

Given: σx = 80 MPa (tension), σy = −20 MPa (compression), τxy = 30 MPa.

  1. Compute averages and radius:

    • σavg = (80 + (−20))/2 = 30 MPa
    • (σx − σy)/2 = (80 − (−20))/2 = 50 MPa
    • R = sqrt(50^2 + 30^2) = sqrt(2500 + 900) = sqrt(3400) ≈ 58.31 MPa
  2. Principal stresses:

    • σ1 = 30 + 58.31 = 88.31 MPa
    • σ2 = 30 − 58.31 = −28.31 MPa
  3. Maximum shear:

    • τmax = 58.31 MPa (occurs on planes at 45° from principal planes)
  4. Principal angle:

    • tan(2θp) = 2·30/(80 − (−20)) = ⁄100 = 0.6 → 2θp = arctan(0.6) ≈ 30.96° → θp ≈ 15.48°
    • Principal plane orientations: θp ≈ 15.5° and θp + 90° ≈ 105.5°

Interpretation: The material experiences one tensile principal stress (~88.3 MPa) and one compressive (~−28.3 MPa). Maximum shear magnitude is ~58.3 MPa.

Example 2 — Pure shear

Given: σx = 0, σy = 0, τxy = 50 MPa.

  1. σavg = 0, (σx − σy)/2 = 0, R = sqrt(0 + 50^2) = 50 MPa.
  2. Principal stresses:
    • σ1 = 0 + 50 = 50 MPa
    • σ2 = 0 − 50 = −50 MPa
  3. τmax = 50 MPa (occurs at planes 45° from x-axis).
  4. Principal angle:
    • tan(2θp) = 2·50/(0 − 0) → infinite → 2θp = 90° → θp = 45°.

Interpretation: Pure shear transforms to equal and opposite principal normal stresses ±50 MPa at 45°.

Example 3 — Equal biaxial tension with shear

Given: σx = 40 MPa, σy = 40 MPa, τxy = 20 MPa.

  1. σavg = (40 + 40)/2 = 40 MPa; (σx − σy)/2 = 0.
  2. R = sqrt(0 + 20^2) = 20 MPa.
  3. Principal stresses:
    • σ1 = 40 + 20 = 60 MPa
    • σ2 = 40 − 20 = 20 MPa
  4. τmax = 20 MPa.
  5. Principal angle:
    • tan(2θp) = 2·20/(40 − 40) → infinite → θp = 45°.

Interpretation: With equal biaxial normal stress, shear alone splits the stresses into 60 and 20 MPa along ±45°.

How to draw Mohr’s Circle (quick steps)

  1. Plot point A = (σx, τxy) and point B = (σy, −τxy) on the σ–τ plane.
  2. The circle center is at σavg on the σ-axis; radius R as above.
  3. Principal stresses are intersection points of circle with σ-axis (τ = 0): σ1 and σ2.
  4. Points on circle give stresses on planes at various θ; angle on circle is 2θ (graphical relation).

Quick checklist for using formulas

  • Use consistent sign convention for τxy (positive if shear on x-face causing counterclockwise positive rotation).
  • Ensure units match (MPa, psi).
  • For angles: arctan gives 2θ; divide by 2 and add 90° as needed for the second principal plane.
  • Maximum shear plane orientations are ±45° from principal planes.

Summary table (results from examples)

Example σx (MPa) σy (MPa) τxy (MPa) σ1 (MPa) σ2 (MPa) τmax (MPa) θp (°)
1 80 −20 30 88.31 −28.31 58.31 15.48
2 0 0 50 50 −50 50 45.00
3 40 40 20 60 20 20 45.00

If you want, I can provide step-by-step plots of the Mohr’s circles for these examples or a short Python script to compute and draw them.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *