Mohr Circle Calculator
Calculate Principal Stresses, Max Shear, and Visualize Stress Transformation
Stress State Inputs
Minor Principal Stress (σ2)
-30.00 MPa
Max Shear Stress (τmax)
50.00 MPa
Circle Center (C)
20.00 MPa
Radius (R)
50.00 MPa
Principal Angle (θp)
26.57°
| Parameter | Value | Formula Used |
|---|
Mohr’s Circle Diagram
● State Stress |
● Principal Stresses
What is a Mohr Circle Calculator?
A Mohr Circle Calculator is an essential engineering tool used to visualize and calculate the transformation of plane stress. In mechanics of materials and structural engineering, determining the state of stress at a point often requires rotating the coordinate system to find the maximum normal stresses (Principal Stresses) and maximum shear stresses.
Developed by Christian Otto Mohr, this graphical representation connects the normal stress (σ) and shear stress (τ) acting on a material element. While originally a graphical method, our digital Mohr Circle Calculator uses precise analytical formulas to provide instant results for engineers, students, and designers working with stress analysis.
Typical users include mechanical engineers analyzing shaft loads, civil engineers designing concrete beams, and geotechnical engineers studying soil stability. It is often misunderstood that Mohr’s circle represents the physical shape of the material; in reality, it is a plot in the stress domain (Sigma vs. Tau).
Mohr Circle Formula and Mathematical Explanation
The calculator determines the properties of the circle based on the input stress state defined by σx, σy, and τxy. The core logic relies on finding the center of the circle on the normal stress axis and calculating its radius.
Step-by-Step Derivation
1. Calculate Average Stress (Center): The center of the Mohr circle lies on the horizontal axis (σ-axis).
C = (σx + σy) / 2
2. Calculate Radius (R): The radius represents the maximum shear stress magnitude relative to the center.
R = √[ ( (σx – σy) / 2 )2 + τxy2 ]
3. Principal Stresses: These are the maximum and minimum normal stresses, occurring where shear stress is zero.
σ1 = C + R (Major Principal Stress)
σ2 = C – R (Minor Principal Stress)
4. Maximum Shear Stress: This is simply the radius of the circle.
τmax = R
Variable Definition Table
| Variable | Meaning | Unit | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| σx, σy | Normal Stresses | MPa, psi | -1000 to +1000 |
| τxy | Shear Stress | MPa, psi | 0 to 500 |
| σ1 | Major Principal Stress | MPa, psi | Max system stress |
| θp | Principal Angle | Degrees | -90° to +90° |
Practical Examples (Real-World Use Cases)
Example 1: Shaft Under Torsion and Tension
Imagine a steel drive shaft subjected to a tensile load and a twisting torque.
- Inputs: σx = 80 MPa (Tension), σy = 0 MPa, τxy = 60 MPa (Torsion).
- Calculation:
- Center C = (80 + 0) / 2 = 40 MPa.
- Radius R = √[(40)2 + 602] = √[1600 + 3600] = √5200 ≈ 72.1 MPa.
- σ1 = 40 + 72.1 = 112.1 MPa.
- σ2 = 40 – 72.1 = -32.1 MPa.
- Interpretation: The maximum tensile stress the material must withstand is 112.1 MPa. If the material’s yield strength is 100 MPa, this part will fail.
Example 2: Pressure Vessel Wall
Consider a thin-walled pressure vessel where hoop stress and longitudinal stress are present, but shear is negligible in the primary axes.
- Inputs: σx = 1500 psi (Hoop), σy = 750 psi (Longitudinal), τxy = 0 psi.
- Calculation:
- Center C = (1500 + 750) / 2 = 1125 psi.
- Radius R = (1500 – 750) / 2 = 375 psi.
- σ1 = 1500 psi.
- τmax = 375 psi.
- Interpretation: Since τxy is zero, the input stresses are already principal stresses. The Mohr Circle Calculator confirms the maximum shear stress is 375 psi, occurring at 45 degrees to the principal plane.
How to Use This Mohr Circle Calculator
Using this tool effectively requires identifying your initial stress element correctly. Follow these steps:
- Identify Stresses: Determine σx, σy, and τxy from your loading conditions (e.g., using P/A for axial loads or Tr/J for torsion).
- Enter Values: Input these numbers into the corresponding fields. Ensure you respect sign conventions (Tension is positive (+), Compression is negative (-)).
- Select Units: Choose MPa, psi, or kPa. This label updates the results but does not alter the numerical math.
- Analyze the Chart: Look at the generated Mohr’s Circle. The blue circle represents all possible stress states. The red dots indicate your current input orientation. The green dots on the horizontal axis are your Principal Stresses.
- Read Results: Use σ1 for failure theories like Rankine (Brittle materials) or τmax for Tresca (Ductile materials).
Key Factors That Affect Mohr Circle Results
Several external and internal factors influence the stress state calculated by the Mohr Circle Calculator.
- Load Magnitude: Directly proportional. Doubling the external force doubles σx, which shifts σ1 and σ2 proportionately.
- Cross-Sectional Area: Stress is Force/Area. A smaller area results in higher stress inputs for the same load, expanding the circle radius.
- Sign Convention: Misinterpreting clockwise vs. counter-clockwise shear can invert the angle θp, leading to incorrect physical orientation of reinforcement or strain gauges.
- Combined Loading: Pure tension creates a circle touching the origin. Adding torsion moves the circle away and expands it, often dramatically increasing σ1.
- Internal Pressure: In piping, internal pressure creates bi-axial stress states that define the “starting point” for the Mohr calculation.
- Material Isotropy: The calculator assumes an isotropic material where stress transformation laws hold uniformly in all directions.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Related Tools and Internal Resources