Stress-Strain Calculator

Calculate engineering and true stress-strain from force, area, and elongation measurements.

Calculator

How to Use

  1. 1
    Input Geometry and Load

    Enter the cross-sectional area (or diameter for round bars) and the applied axial force. For pressure vessels, input inner radius, wall thickness, and internal pressure.

  2. 2
    Select the Material and Load Type

    Choose the alloy from the database to retrieve its elastic modulus (E) and yield strength, then select loading mode: tension, compression, bending, torsion, or combined loading.

  3. 3
    Read Stress, Strain, and Safety Factor

    The calculator outputs engineering stress, engineering strain, elastic deformation, and the margin of safety against yielding and ultimate fracture based on the material's properties.

About

Stress and strain analysis forms the quantitative foundation of structural engineering, enabling engineers to predict whether a component will yield, fracture, or deform excessively under applied loads. The fundamental relationships — Hooke's law (σ = Eε in the elastic range), the yield criterion, and fracture mechanics — collectively determine the safe working load of any engineered structure.

The AlloyFYI Stress-Strain Calculator provides rapid first-principles calculations for common loading geometries, bridging the gap between textbook equations and full finite element analysis for routine checks. By pairing the calculation with the material database, engineers avoid the common error of using handbook property values from the wrong temper or heat treatment condition. The calculator also supports sensitivity analysis, allowing the user to explore how changes in geometry or material grade affect the margin of safety, supporting design optimization decisions during early-stage concept development.

FAQ

What is the difference between engineering stress and true stress?
Engineering stress is defined as the applied force divided by the original cross-sectional area (P/A₀), and engineering strain as the change in length divided by the original gauge length (ΔL/L₀). True stress accounts for the actual (necked) cross-section as deformation progresses: σ_true = σ_eng(1 + ε_eng). For small strains (below roughly 5%), the difference is negligible, but for large plastic deformations and ductile fracture analysis, true stress-strain curves are essential. Finite element analysis codes typically require true stress-strain input for accurate large-deformation simulations.
How does Poisson's ratio affect three-dimensional stress analysis?
When a material is loaded uniaxially, it deforms not only in the loading direction but contracts laterally; Poisson's ratio (ν) is the negative of the ratio of lateral to axial strain. For isotropic metals, ν is typically 0.27–0.35. In three-dimensional stress states (biaxial or triaxial loading), Poisson effects couple the strains in each direction, and the full generalized Hooke's law tensor must be used. Neglecting Poisson's effects in a biaxially loaded plate can underestimate through-thickness strains by 30% or more, which matters for fracture mechanics and fatigue life calculations.
What is the difference between yield strength and proof strength?
Yield strength is defined by the 0.2% offset method for materials with a gradual elastic-to-plastic transition: it is the stress at which a line parallel to the elastic modulus line, offset 0.2% strain, intersects the stress-strain curve. Proof strength (RP0.2 per ISO 6892) is mathematically identical to yield strength but is used for materials that do not exhibit a sharp yield point, including aluminum alloys and austenitic stainless steels. For structural steels with a distinct upper and lower yield point, the lower yield stress (ReL) is used as the design value because it represents the sustained yield plateau.
How do stress concentrations affect part design?
Geometric discontinuities such as holes, fillets, keyways, and notches amplify local stresses by a stress concentration factor Kt (or Kf for fatigue). Kt is defined as the ratio of peak local stress to nominal stress and can range from 1.5 for a generous fillet to over 10 for a sharp notch. In static loading, ductile metals can redistribute stress through local yielding and Kt rarely causes failure at the design load. In fatigue, however, the local stress amplitude governs crack initiation, making Kt critical to life prediction. Minimizing Kt through generous radii and smooth transitions is the most effective fatigue mitigation strategy.
What is the von Mises yield criterion used for?
The von Mises criterion is the most widely used yield criterion for ductile metals under multiaxial stress states. It states that yielding begins when the von Mises equivalent (effective) stress σ_e = √(½[((σ_1−σ_2)²+(σ_2−σ_3)²+(σ_3−σ_1)²)]) equals the uniaxial yield strength. This is physically equivalent to yielding occurring when the distortion (shape-changing) strain energy reaches a critical value, independent of hydrostatic pressure. ASME pressure vessel codes and finite element software universally use von Mises stress as the design metric for ductile component analysis.