yield |
Evidence of plastic deformation in structural materials. Also known as plastic flow or creep. |
yield point |
The first stress in a material, usually less than the maximum attainable stress, at which an increase in strain occurs without an increase in stress. Only certain metals-those which exhibit a localized, heterogeneous type of transition from elastic to plastic deformation-produce a yield point. If there is a decrease in stress after yielding, a distinction can be made between upper and lower yield points. The load at which a sudden drop in the flow curve occurs is called the upper yield point. The constant load shown on the flow curve is the lower yield point. |
yield point elongation |
The extension associated with discontinuous yield which occurs at approximately constant load following the onset of plastic flow. It is associated with the propagation of Luder lines or bands” (Automotive Steel Partnership, 1991, p. 18). |
yield strength |
The
stress at which a material exhibits a specified deviation from proportionality
of stress and strain. An offset of 0.2% is used for many metals.
Compare with tensile strength. yield stress.
The stress level of highly ductile materials, such as structural
steels, at which large strains take place without further increase
in stress. |
yield stress |
“A
stress at which a steel exhibits the first measurable permanent
plastic deformation” (Automotive Steel Partnership, 1991,
p. 19). The level of stress when plastic flow begins during a uniaxial
tensile test. |
young’s modulus or elastic modulus |
The
stress at which a material initially exhibits permanent plastic
deformation in a tensile test. |