bot6 wrote:Ciro, just to make it clearer, "elastic" just means there is no permanent deformation once the load (aero or test) is taken off the wing. It just comes back to its "good as new" position.
Thanks, bot6. With all due respect I already knew that, I design bridges and other structures for a living.
What I meant is that what the materials I am used to work with in structural design, only behave
nonlinearly (I mean, in stress-strain curve) when:
a- They have surpassed the yield point (thus, they have permanent deformations), or
b- They behave plastically (thus, they
also have permanent deformations)
I would be grateful if someone explains to me which materials are those that are elastic and behave nonlinearly before the yield point (I do not doubt they may exist, it's just that I don't know them).
To put it in a simple way: all the materials I know (not many, I confess) that become "good as new" after strain, behave linearly.
Very good idea, Tim, thanks. Very, very clever design, I think it behaves similarly to the hinge I described a few pages before (the "kitchen door hinge").
However, any similar solution does not use what I think are exotic, non-linear and at the same time elastic (?) materials.