Thermal Stress Calculator
Calculate internal stress generated by temperature changes in restrained materials.
Calculation Results
What is Thermal Stress?
Thermal stress is the internal mechanical stress created when a material is prevented from expanding or contracting during temperature changes. Most materials expand when heated and contract when cooled. If a structural component (like a railway track or a bridge beam) is fixed at both ends, the change in temperature creates internal forces that can lead to warping, buckling, or structural failure.
Thermal Stress Formula
The calculator uses the standard linear elastic formula for thermal stress:
σ = E × α × ΔT
- σ (Sigma): Thermal Stress (measured in Pascals or MPa).
- E: Young's Modulus of the material (stiffness).
- α (Alpha): Linear Coefficient of Thermal Expansion.
- ΔT: Change in temperature (T_final - T_initial).
How to Use This Calculator
To calculate thermal stress, follow these steps:
- Enter the Young's Modulus of your material (e.g., Steel is roughly 200 GPa).
- Input the Thermal Expansion Coefficient. Note that the tool expects the value in 10⁻⁶ units (e.g., for 12 x 10⁻⁶, just enter 12).
- Enter the Initial Temperature and the Final Temperature of the environment.
- Click "Calculate" to see the resulting stress and a detailed breakdown of the math involved.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does thermal stress occur?
It occurs because the material wants to change its physical dimensions due to thermal kinetic energy, but external constraints (supports or adjacent materials) apply a counter-force to keep the dimensions constant.
Does length affect thermal stress?
In a perfectly restrained bar, the length (L) cancels out in the stress equation, meaning the stress level depends only on the material properties and the temperature difference, not the total length of the object.