Wood Strength Definitions
Strength may be defined as the ability to resist applied
stress: the greater the resistance, the stronger the material. Resistance
may be measured in several ways. One is the maximum stress that the material
can endure before "failure" occurs. Another approach is to measure the
deformation or strain that results from a given level of stress before the
point of total failure. Strength of wood is often thought of in terms of
bending strength. This is certainly a useful yardstick of strength but is by
no means the only one. A number of other strength criteria are described
below.
Stress is the amount of force for a given unit of area.
It is typically measured in pounds per square inch (psi). Example: if a 1000
pound load was applied on the edge of a block of wood measuring 2-inches by
2-inches in cross-section by 10 inches in length, the applied stress would
be 1000 pounds divided by 4 square inches = 250 lb./sq. inch.
Strain is defined as unit deformation or movement per
unit of original length. It is typically expressed in inches per inch.
Example: if the 10-inch long block of wood in the stress example above was
compressed by 0.002 inches, the strain would be 0.002 inches/10 inches =
0.0002 inches per inch.
Elasticity is a property of wood in which strains or
deformations are recoverable after an applied stress is removed, up to a
certain level of stress known as the proportional limit. Below this
point, each increment of stress will produce a proportional increment of
strain (the stress/strain ratio is constant) and the wood will return to its
original position once the stress is removed. Beyond the proportional limit,
each increment of stress will cause increasingly larger increments of strain
(as failure is approached) and removal of the stress will only result in a
partial recovery of the strain.
Modulus of elasticity or Young's modulus is the ratio of
stress to strain. Within the elastic range below the proportional limit,
this ratio is a constant for a given piece of wood, making it useful in
static bending tests for determining the relative stiffness of a board. The
modulus of elasticity is normally measured in pounds per square inch (psi)
and is abbreviated as MOE or E. Values for E relating to wood properties are
commonly in terms of million psi; for simplicity, a board with a modulus of
elasticity of 2,100,000 psi. (2.1 x 106) may be reported as 2.1E.
Modulus of rupture is the maximum load carrying capacity
of a member. It is generally used in tests of bending strength to quantify
the stress required to cause failure. It is reported in units of psi.
Fiber stress at proportional limit represents the
maximum stress a board can be subjected to without exceeding the elastic
range of the wood. Permanent set will result if an applied stress exceeds
the proportional limit. This property is typically reported in units of psi.
Maximum crushing strength is the maximum stress
sustained by a board when pressure is applied parallel to the grain.
Impact bending involves dropping a hammer of a given
weight upon a board from successively greater heights until complete rupture
occurs. The height of the drop that causes failure provides a comparative
measure of how well the wood absorbs shock. It is reported in units of
inches or centimeters.
Stiffness may be quantified using the modulus of
elasticity, E. The higher the E value, the stiffer the wood and the lower
the deformation under a given load. A board rated at 2.0E is twice as stiff
as one rated at 1.0E.
Compression stress shortens or compresses the
material. For the woodworker, the primary types of compression to consider
are parallel to the grain and perpendicular to the grain. Compression
parallel to the grain shortens the fibers in the wood lengthwise. An example
would be chair or table legs which are primarily subjected to downward,
rather than lateral pressure. Wood is very strong in compression parallel to
the grain and this is seldom a limiting factor in furniture design. It is
considerably weaker in compression perpendicular to the grain. An example of
this type of compression would be the pressure that chair legs exert on a
wooden floor. If the applied pressure (weight) exceeds the fiber stress at
proportional limit for the wood, permanent indentations will result in the
floor. Compression stress is measured in psi.
Tensile stress elongates or expands an object.
Measurements of tensile stress perpendicular to the grain are useful for
quantifying resistance to splitting. Examples of such stress include
splitting firewood, driving nails, and forcing cupped boards to be flat.
Wood is relatively weak in tension perpendicular to the grain but it is very
strong in tension parallel to the grain (visualize a board being pulled from
both ends). Due to difficulties in testing and the limited use for such
data, tension parallel to the grain has not been extensively measured and/or
reported to date. Tensile stress is measured in psi.
Shear stress involves the application of stress from two
opposite directions causing portions of an object to move in parallel but
opposite directions. Wood is very resistant to shearing perpendicular to the
grain and this property is not measured via a standard test. Wood shears
much easier in a direction parallel to the grain - consider a screw running
perpendicular to the grain: it will shear out to the nearest end-grain if a
sufficiently large force is applied to the board parallel to the grain.
Shear stress is measured in psi.
Density is weight per unit volume. For wood, density is
expressed as pounds per cubic foot, kilograms per cubic meter, or grams per
cubic centimeter - at a specified moisture content. Density is the single
most important indicator of strength in wood: a wood that is heavier (i.e.,
more wood substance per unit volume) will generally tend to be stronger than
a lighter one.
Specific gravity as applied to wood, is the ratio of an
ovendry weight of a wood sample to the weight of water (whose volume is
equal to the volume of the wood sample at a specified moisture content).
Specific gravity is often used in place of density to standardize
comparisons of wood species - as with density, the higher the specific
gravity, the heavier the wood, and the stronger it tends to be. At a
moisture content of 12 percent, most woods have a specific gravity between
0.3 to 0.8 (water has a specific gravity of 1.0).
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