Strength of Materials
This book is a first course in the analysis of structures. Although most of the material should be accessible to all students who have had a mechanics course, a previous exposure to Engineering Mechanics would be useful. There are no mathematical prerequisites, though some elementary calculus would be useful in certain sections which can be skipped without affecting the flow of the book.
Contents
[edit | edit source]- Introduction
- Introductory Concepts
- Axial Deformation of Bars
- Generalized Hooke's Law: Pressure Vessels
- Torsion
- Loading of Beams
- General State of Stress
- Yield and Fracture
- Elastic Stress Analysis
- Column
- Energy and Virtual Work
- Classical Energy Methods
- Elastic Analysis of Systems
- Plastic Limit Analysis
- Weakest link determination by use of three parameter Weibull statistics
To do
[edit | edit source]- Create appropriate chapters for Unsorted topics
- General cleanup
- Move images to Commons and create SVGs
Author Resources
[edit | edit source]The following are free resources available online that may be helpful in completing the writing of this text. Of course each source must be evaluated for accuracy and copyrights must be respected.
Strength of Material Textbooks
[edit | edit source]John P. Kottcamp (1919) Strength of Materials http://books.google.com/books?id=f580AAAAMAAJ&dq=strength%20of%20materials&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false
James E. Boyd (1911) Strength of Materials http://books.google.com/books?id=07w0AAAAMAAJ&dq=strength%20of%20materials&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false
Arthur Morely (1913) Strength of Materials http://books.google.com/books?id=BT9DAAAAIAAJ&dq=strength%20of%20materials&pg=PR8#v=onepage&q&f=false
Open Courseware
[edit | edit source]MIT Opencourseware 3.11 Mechanics of Materials http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/materials-science-and-engineering/3-11-mechanics-of-materials-fall-1999/modules/ Graduate level course. Includes multiple pdfs with over 300 pages of content.
Video Lectures
[edit | edit source]Prof. S.P. Harsha. Strength of Materials Lectures. NPTEL Indian Institute of Technology, Roorke http://freevideolectures.com/Course/2361/Strength-of-Materials. This includes 40 lectures averaging between 50 and 60 minutes long.
Prof. S.K. Bhattacharyya (2005) Strength of Materials Lectures. NPTEL Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur http://nptel.iitm.ac.in/video.php?subjectId=105105108 This includes 40 lectures averaging between 50 and 60 minutes long taught in the civil engineering department.