Solveeit Logo

Question

Physics Question on thermal properties of matter

A brass wire 1.8 m long at 27 °C is held taut with little tension between two rigid supports. If the wire is cooled to a temperature of –39 °C, what is the tension developed in the wire, if its diameter is 2.0 mm? Co-efficient of linear expansion of brass = 2.0 × 10–5 K–1; Young’s modulus of brass = 0.91 × 1011 Pa.

Answer

Initial temperature, T1 = 27°C
Length of the brass wire at T1, l = 1.8 m
Final temperature, T2 = –39°C
Diameter of the wire, d = 2.0 mm = 2 × 10–3 m
Tension developed in the wire = F
Coefficient of linear expansion of brass, α = 2.0 × 10–5 K–1
Young’s modulus of brass, Y = 0.91 × 1011 Pa
Young’s modulus is given by the relation:
Y = SressStrain\frac{Sress}{Strain} = FAΔLL\frac{\frac{F}{A}}{\frac{\Delta L}{L}}
Δ\DeltaL = F×LA×Y\frac{F \times L}{A \times Y} ...… (i)
Where,
F = Tension developed in the wire
A = Area of cross-section of the wire.
ΔL = Change in the length, given by the relation:
ΔL = αL(T2 – T1) ...… (ii)
Equating equations (i) and (ii), we get:
αL(T2-T1) = FLπ\frac{FL}{\pi}(d2\frac{d}{2})2xY
F = α(T2-T1)πY(d2\frac{d}{2})2
F = 2 x 10-5 x (-39-27) x 3.14 x 0.91 x 1011 x (2×1032\frac{2 \times 10^{-3}}{2})
F = -3.8 x 102 N
(The negative sign indicates that the tension is directed inward.)
Hence, the tension developed in the wire is 3.8 ×102 N.