Stress and Strain: Basic Terms and Concepts

Steven Dutch, Natural and Applied Sciences, University of Wisconsin - Green Bay
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Units

In traditional geology the unit of pressure is the bar, which is about equal to atmospheric pressure. It is also about equal to the pressure under 10 meters of water. For pressures deep in the earth we use the kilobar, equal to 1000 bars. The pressure beneath 10 km of water, or at the bottom of the deepest oceanic trenches, is about 1 kilobar. Beneath the Antarctic ice cap (maximum thickness about 5 km) the pressure is about half a kilobar at greatest.

In the SI System, the fundamental unit of length is the meter and mass is the kilogram. Important units used in geology include:

By comparison with traditional pressure units, one bar = 100,000 pascals. One megapascal (Mpa) equals 10 bars, one Gigapascal (Gpa) equals 10 kilobars.

Using Units in Calculations

The fundamental rule in using units in calculations is that units obey the same algebraic rules as other quantities

Example: Converting Traditional Density to SI density

Density is conventionally represented as grams per cubic centimeter. How do we represent density in the SI system?

1 gram/cm3 =
(0.001 kg)/(.01 m)3 =
10-3 kg/10-6 m3 =
1000 kg/m3

Thus, to convert traditional to SI density, multiply by 1000. Thus, 2.7 gm/cm3 = 2700 kg/m3, etc.

Example: Pressure Beneath a Stone Block

What's the pressure beneath a granite block 20 meters long, 15 meters wide and 10 meters high, with density 2.7 gm/cm3?

First, we find the mass of the block. Mass is volume times density
or 20 x 15 x 10 m3 x 2700 kg/m3 = 8.1 x 106 kg.
Note that we have m3 times kg/m3, and the m3 terms cancel out to leave the correct unit, kilograms.

Now the force the block exerts is given by mass times acceleration, in this case the acceleration of gravity, or 9.8 m/sec2.
Thus the force the block exerts is 8.1 x 106 kg x 9.8 m/sec2, or 7.9 x 107 kg-m/sec2.
Referring to the SI units listed above, we see that these are indeed the correct units for force. The block exerts 7.9 x 107 newtons of force on the ground beneath it.

The pressure the block exerts is force divided by area, or 7.9 x 107 newtons/(20 m x 15 m) = 265,000 pascals (verify that the units are correct). This is only 2.65 bars, the pressure beneath 27 meters of water. Scuba divers can stand that pressure easily, but nobody would want to lie under a ten-meter thick slab of rock. This should bother you.

It should be intuitively obvious that the pressure will be the same regardless of the area of the block. Can you show why this is so?

Stress Terms

Stress is defined as force per unit area. It has the same units as pressure, and in fact pressure is one special variety of stress. However, stress is a much more complex quantity than pressure because it varies both with direction and with the surface it acts on.

Compression
Stress that acts to shorten an object.
Tension
Stress that acts to lengthen an object.
Normal Stress
Stress that acts perpendicular to a surface. Can be either compressional or tensional.
Shear
Stress that acts parallel to a surface. It can cause one object to slide over another. It also tends to deform originally rectangular objects into parallelograms. The most general definition is that shear acts to change the angles in an object.
Hydrostatic
Stress (usually compressional) that is uniform in all directions. A scuba diver experiences hydrostatic stress. Stress in the earth is nearly hydrostatic. The term for uniform stress in the earth is lithostatic.
Directed Stress
Stress that varies with direction. Stress under a stone slab is directed; there is a force in one direction but no counteracting forces perpendicular to it. This is why a person under a thick slab gets squashed but a scuba diver under the same pressure doesn't. The scuba diver feels the same force in all directions.

In geology we never see stress. We only see the results of stress as it deforms materials. Even if we were to use a strain gauge to measure in-situ stress in the rocks, we would not measure the stress itself. We would measure the deformation of the strain gauge (that's why it's called a "strain gauge") and use that to infer the stress.

Strain Terms

Strain is defined as the amount of deformation an object experiences compared to its original size and shape. For example, if a block 10 cm on a side is deformed so that it becomes 9 cm long, the strain is (10-9)/10 or 0.1 (sometimes expressed in percent, in this case 10 percent.) Note that strain is dimensionless.

Longitudinal or Linear Strain
Strain that changes the length of a line without changing its direction. Can be either compressional or tensional.
Compression
Longitudinal strain that shortens an object.
Tension
Longitudinal strain that lengthens an object.
Shear
Strain that changes the angles of an object. Shear causes lines to rotate.
Infinitesimal Strain
Strain that is tiny, a few percent or less. Allows a number of useful mathematical simplifications and approximations.
Finite Strain
Strain larger than a few percent. Requires a more complicated mathematical treatment than infinitesimal strain.
Homogeneous Strain
Uniform strain. Straight lines in the original object remain straight. Parallel lines remain parallel. Circles deform to ellipses. Note that this definition rules out folding, since an originally straight layer has to remain straight.
Inhomogeneous Strain
How real geology behaves. Deformation varies from place to place. Lines may bend and do not necessarily remain parallel.

Terms for Behavior of Materials

Elastic
Material deforms under stress but returns to its original size and shape when the stress is released. There is no permanent deformation. Some elastic strain, like in a rubber band, can be large, but in rocks it is usually small enough to be considered infinitesimal.
Brittle
Material deforms by fracturing. Glass is brittle. Rocks are typically brittle at low temperatures and pressures.
Ductile
Material deforms without breaking. Metals are ductile. Many materials show both types of behavior. They may deform in a ductile manner if deformed slowly, but fracture if deformed too quickly or too much. Rocks are typically ductile at high temperatures or pressures.
Viscous
Materials that deform steadily under stress. Purely viscous materials like liquids deform under even the smallest stress. Rocks may behave like viscous materials under high temperature and pressure.
Plastic
Material does not flow until a threshhold stress has been exceeded.
Viscoelastic
Combines elastic and viscous behavior. Models of glacio-isostasy frequently assume a viscoelastic earth: the crust flexes elastically and the underlying mantle flows viscously.

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Created 23 February 1999, Last Update 24 February 1999
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