Question:

The factor most critical in determining the area under the stress-strain curve for a given material is:

Show Hint

Toughness = total energy to break the material. Just look at the whole area under the curve!
Updated On: June 02, 2025
  • The material's density
  • The material's toughness
  • The material's conductivity
  • The material's transparency
Hide Solution
collegedunia
Verified By Collegedunia

The Correct Option is B

Solution and Explanation

The area under the stress-strain curve represents the total energy per unit volume that a material can absorb before it fractures — a property known as toughness.
Understanding Toughness:
  • Toughness measures both strength and ductility.
  • A tough material can withstand high stress and also undergo significant strain before breaking.
  • Mathematically, it is the integral of the stress-strain curve: \[ \text{Toughness} = \int_0^{\epsilon_f} \sigma \, d\epsilon \] where \( \sigma \) is stress and \( \epsilon_f \) is strain at fracture.
Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
  • (A) Density: Related to mass and volume, not mechanical energy absorption.
  • (C) Conductivity: Pertains to electrical/thermal behavior, not mechanical stress-strain behavior.
  • (D) Transparency: Optical property, irrelevant in this context.
Hence, the material’s toughness is the factor most directly associated with the area under the stress-strain curve.
Was this answer helpful?
0
0

TS PGECET Notification