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Necking (engineering)

The above image shows a test specimen, when of a certain kind of material, and experienced under a great enough load, experiences necking. The portion where necking occurs may be called the neck of the specimen.

In engineering and materials science, necking is a mode of tensile deformation where relatively large amounts of strain localize disproportionately in a small region of the material. The resulting prominent decrease in local cross-sectional area provides the basis for the name "neck". Because the local strains in the neck are large, necking is often closely associated with yielding, a form of plastic deformation associated with ductile materials, often metals or polymers.[1] Once necking has begun, the neck becomes the exclusive location of yielding in the material, as the reduced area gives the neck the largest local stress.

  1. ^ Kinloch, AJ; Young, RJ (1995). Fracture Behaviour of Polymers. Chapman and Hall. p. 108. ISBN 9789401715966.

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