Fracture point
The fracture point (similar to the yield point) describes a solid material’s elastic limit, which is the maximum stress per unit area it can withstand before there is permanent deformation or fracture. In other words, it is the limit of the material’s elasticity, for up to that point, the solid can resume its original shape when the load is removed; after that point, it undergoes permanent (plastic) deformation and will not return to its original shape even after the load (yield load) has been removed. For example where a timber beam might bow under a weight but will return to its original straight shape once the load is removed.
However no structural material exhibits perfect elasticity: depending on the type of structure and the material, permanent deformations are often unavoidable whenever loads exceed certain values. That is why engineers design structures to ensure the materials are being used within their elastic range and the loads involved will not produce permanent deformations. All structural materials behave plastically beyond their elastic range.
However, even if some materials show elastic behaviour, they may – after a long period of service, usually many years – exhibit a degree of plastic flow (or creep). In the example of the timber beam bowing, if the weight remains for sometime and is then removed the beam may remain bowed, showing signs of creep, this may also be the case with timber beams bowing over time from a combination of self weight, angle of cut and drying out.
On a graph showing a stress-strain curve, the point of the limit of elastic behaviour is called the ‘yield point’ and this is where plastic deformation begins – some of this deformation will be plastic and irreversible. In structural engineering, the yield point is regarded as a ‘soft failure’ mode which does not usually cause catastrophic or ultimate failure, it might be described as ductile fracture depending on the material, or a brittle fracture. This is effect the fracture point, where the material starts to break, either gradually or quickly, the behaviour depending on the material and stresses, the breaking point might be where a timber beam goes beyond, the yield, soft or ductile failure and brittle or fracture points to break and collapse.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- Brittle fracture.
- Concept structural design.
- Detailed design.
- Ductile fracture.
- Elements of structure in buildings.
- Elasticity.
- Elastic limit.
- Moment.
- Stiffness.
- Structural engineer.
- Structural principles.
- Structural systems for offices.
- Structural vibration.
- Structures at the end of their design life.
- The development of structural membranes.
- Types of structural load.
- Vibrations.
- Yield point.
Featured articles and news
New President of ECA announced
Ruth Devine MBE becomes the 112th President of the Electrical Contractors Association.
New CIAT Professional Standards Competency Framework
Supercedes the 2019 Professional Standards Framework from 1 May 2025.
Difficult Sites: Architecture Against the Odds
Free exhibition at the RIBA Architecture Gallery until 31 May.
PPN 021: Payment Spot Checks in Public Sub-Contracts
Published following consultation and influence from ECA.
Designing Buildings reaches 20,000 articles
We take a look back at some of the stranger contributions.
Lessons learned from other industries.
The Buildings of the Malting Industry. Book review.
Conserving places with climate resilience in mind.
Combating burnout.
The 5 elements of seiri, seiton, seiso, seiketsu and shitsuke.
Shading for housing, a design guide
A look back at embedding a new culture of shading.
The Architectural Technology Awards
The AT Awards 2025 are open for entries!
ECA Blueprint for Electrification
The 'mosaic of interconnected challenges' and how to deliver the UK’s Transition to Clean Power.
Grenfell Tower Principal Contractor Award notice
Tower repair and maintenance contractor announced as demolition contractor.
Passivhaus social homes benefit from heat pump service
Sixteen new homes designed and built to achieve Passivhaus constructed in Dumfries & Galloway.
CABE Publishes Results of 2025 Building Control Survey
Concern over lack of understanding of how roles have changed since the introduction of the BSA 2022.