plastic yield - definição. O que é plastic yield. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é plastic yield - definição

PROPERTY OF MATERIALS
Deformable bodies; Microplasticity; Plastic material; Plastic Deformation; Plastic yield; Deformable body; Plasticity of materials; Plastic deformation of solids; Deformation (science); Elastic and plastic strain; Elastic and Plastic Strain; Application: Elastic and Plastic Strain; Plasticity in metals
  • Comparison of Tresca criterion to Von Mises criterion
  • The three characteristic regions of the critical resolved shear stress as a function of temperature.
  • The three stages of time-independent plastic deformation of single crystals.
  • Plasticity under a spherical nanoindenter in (111) copper. All particles in ideal lattice positions are omitted and the color code refers to the von Mises stress field.
  • Tresca]]'s hexagonal yield surface.

Plasticity (physics)         
In physics and materials science, plasticity, also known as plastic deformation, is the ability of a solid material to undergo permanent deformation, a non-reversible change of shape in response to applied forces. For example, a solid piece of metal being bent or pounded into a new shape displays plasticity as permanent changes occur within the material itself.
Yield (multithreading)         
BASIC OPERATION IN CONCURRENT COMPUTING
Yield method
In computer science, yield is an action that occurs in a computer program during multithreading, of forcing a processor to relinquish control of the current running thread, and sending it to the end of the running queue, of the same scheduling priority.
Yield (chemistry)         
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ANY OF SEVERAL RELATIVE AND ABSOLUTE MEASURES OF THE AMOUNT OF DESIRED PRODUCT OBTAINED IN A CHEMICAL REACTION
Percent yield; Reaction yield; Theoretical yield; Molar yield; Chemical yield; Yield (chemical); Percentage Yield; Relative yield; Experimental yield; % yield; Percentage yield; Actual yield
In chemistry, yield, also referred to as reaction yield, is a measure of the quantity of moles of a product formed in relation to the reactant consumed, obtained in a chemical reaction, usually expressed as a percentage. Yield is one of the primary factors that scientists must consider in organic and inorganic chemical synthesis processes.

Wikipédia

Plasticity (physics)

In physics and materials science, plasticity (also known as plastic deformation) is the ability of a solid material to undergo permanent deformation, a non-reversible change of shape in response to applied forces. For example, a solid piece of metal being bent or pounded into a new shape displays plasticity as permanent changes occur within the material itself. In engineering, the transition from elastic behavior to plastic behavior is known as yielding.

Plastic deformation is observed in most materials, particularly metals, soils, rocks, concrete, and foams. However, the physical mechanisms that cause plastic deformation can vary widely. At a crystalline scale, plasticity in metals is usually a consequence of dislocations. Such defects are relatively rare in most crystalline materials, but are numerous in some and part of their crystal structure; in such cases, plastic crystallinity can result. In brittle materials such as rock, concrete and bone, plasticity is caused predominantly by slip at microcracks. In cellular materials such as liquid foams or biological tissues, plasticity is mainly a consequence of bubble or cell rearrangements, notably T1 processes.

For many ductile metals, tensile loading applied to a sample will cause it to behave in an elastic manner. Each increment of load is accompanied by a proportional increment in extension. When the load is removed, the piece returns to its original size. However, once the load exceeds a threshold – the yield strength – the extension increases more rapidly than in the elastic region; now when the load is removed, some degree of extension will remain.

Elastic deformation, however, is an approximation and its quality depends on the time frame considered and loading speed. If, as indicated in the graph opposite, the deformation includes elastic deformation, it is also often referred to as "elasto-plastic deformation" or "elastic-plastic deformation".

Perfect plasticity is a property of materials to undergo irreversible deformation without any increase in stresses or loads. Plastic materials that have been hardened by prior deformation, such as cold forming, may need increasingly higher stresses to deform further. Generally, plastic deformation is also dependent on the deformation speed, i.e. higher stresses usually have to be applied to increase the rate of deformation. Such materials are said to deform visco-plastically.