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Elastic Potential Energy Simplified Revision Notes

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15.1.2 Elastic Potential Energy

Introduction

When a string or spring is stretched or compressed, energy is stored within it as elastic potential energy. This energy is due to the work done to deform the string or spring. The elastic potential energy is given by a formula derived from the principles of mechanics.

This note focuses on:

  1. Understanding elastic potential energy.
  2. Deriving the formula for elastic potential energy.
  3. Applying the work-energy principle to solve problems involving kinetic energy, gravitational potential energy, and elastic potential energy.

Elastic Potential Energy

The elastic potential energy (EeE_e) stored in a stretched or compressed string or spring is given by:

Ee=12λx2lE_e = \frac{1}{2} \frac{\lambda x^2}{l}

where:

  • λ\lambda is the modulus of elasticity (N\text{N})
  • xx is the extension or compression of the string/spring (m\text{m})
  • ll is the natural length of the string/spring (m\text{m})

Elastic potential energy is the work done to stretch or compress the spring from its natural length.

Deriving the Formula for Elastic Potential Energy

The work done to stretch a spring or string by an infinitesimal length dxdx is:

dW=TdxdW = T \, dx

where T=λxlT = \frac{\lambda x}{l} is the tension in the string or spring at extension xx.

To find the total work done in stretching the spring from x=0x = 0 (natural length) to xx, integrate dWdW:

W=0xTdx=0xλxldxW = \int_0^x T \, dx = \int_0^x \frac{\lambda x}{l} \, dx

Perform the integration:

W=λl0xxdx=λl[x22]0x=λlx22W = \frac{\lambda}{l} \int_0^x x \, dx = \frac{\lambda}{l} \left[ \frac{x^2}{2} \right]_0^x = \frac{\lambda}{l} \cdot \frac{x^2}{2}

Thus, the elastic potential energy stored is:

Ee=12λx2lE_e = \frac{1}{2} \frac{\lambda x^2}{l}

Work-Energy Principle

The work-energy principle can be extended to include elastic potential energy. For a system involving motion and deformation of a spring or string:

Work done by external forces=ΔKE+ΔPE+ΔEe\text{Work done by external forces} = \Delta KE + \Delta PE + \Delta E_e

where:

  • ΔKE\Delta KE: Change in kinetic energy (12mv2\frac{1}{2} mv^2)
  • ΔPE\Delta PE: Change in gravitational potential energy (mghmgh)
  • ΔEe\Delta E_e: Change in elastic potential energy (12λx2l\frac{1}{2} \frac{\lambda x^2}{l})

Worked Examples

infoNote

Example 1: Elastic Potential Energy Stored in a String


Problem

An elastic string has a natural length of 2 m and a modulus of elasticity λ = 50 N

The string is stretched to a total length of 2.5 m

Find the elastic potential energy stored in the string.


Step 1: Calculate the extension:

x=stretched lengthnatural length=2.52=:highlight[0.5m]x = \text{stretched length} - \text{natural length} = 2.5 - 2 = :highlight[0.5 \, \text{m}]

Step 2: Use the formula for elastic potential energy:

Ee=12λx2lE_e = \frac{1}{2} \frac{\lambda x^2}{l}

Step 3: Substitute the values (λ=50N,x=0.5m,l=2m\lambda = 50 \, \text{N}, x = 0.5 \, \text{m}, l = 2 \, \text{m}):

Ee=12×50×(0.5)22E_e = \frac{1}{2} \times \frac{50 \times (0.5)^2}{2}

Step 4: Simplify:

Ee=12×50×0.252=12×12.51=:highlight[6.25J]E_e = \frac{1}{2} \times \frac{50 \times 0.25}{2} = \frac{1}{2} \times \frac{12.5}{1} = :highlight[6.25 \, \text{J}]

Final Answer:

The elastic potential energy stored in the string is 6.25 J

infoNote

Example 2: Applying the Work-Energy Principle


Problem

A particle of mass 0.5 kg is attached to an elastic string with natural length 1 m and modulus of elasticity 40 N

The particle is released from rest with the string initially stretched to 1.5 m.

Ignoring air resistance, find the speed of the particle when the string returns to its natural length.


Step 1: Use the work-energy principle

The total energy at the start equals the total energy when the string returns to its natural length:

Einitial=EfinalE_\text{initial} = E_\text{final}

At the start (stretched position):

Einitial=KEinitial+PEinitial+Eeinitial.E_\text{initial} = KE_\text{initial} + PE_\text{initial} + E_{e_\text{initial}}.

The particle starts from rest (KEinitial=0KE_\text{initial} = 0) and is at the natural level (PEinitial=0PE_\text{initial} = 0):

Einitial=Eeinitial=12λx2lE_\text{initial} = E_{e_\text{initial}} = \frac{1}{2} \frac{\lambda x^2}{l}

Substitute λ=40N,x=0.5m,l=1m\lambda = 40 \, \text{N}, x = 0.5 \, \text{m}, l = 1 \, \text{m}

Einitial=12×40×(0.5)21=12×40×0.25=:highlight[5J]E_\text{initial} = \frac{1}{2} \times \frac{40 \times (0.5)^2}{1} = \frac{1}{2} \times 40 \times 0.25 = :highlight[5 \, \text{J}]

At the natural length:

Efinal=KEfinal+PEfinal+EefinalE_\text{final} = KE_\text{final} + PE_\text{final} + E_{e_\text{final}}

At the natural length, Eefinal=0E_{e_\text{final}} = 0 (no extension), and PEfinal=0PE_\text{final} = 0 (level ground):

Efinal=KEfinal=12mv2E_\text{final} = KE_\text{final} = \frac{1}{2} mv^2

Set Einitial=EfinalE_\text{initial} = E_\text{final}

5=12(0.5)v25 = \frac{1}{2} (0.5)v^2

Step 2: Solve for vv

5=0.25v2v2=50.25=205 = 0.25v^2 \quad \Rightarrow \quad v^2 = \frac{5}{0.25} = 20v=20:highlight[4.47ms1]v = \sqrt{20} \approx :highlight[4.47 \, \text{ms}^{-1}]

Final Answer:

The speed of the particle is 4.47 ms⁻¹

Note Summary

infoNote

Common Mistakes

  1. Forgetting to calculate the extension (xx): Remember x=stretched lengthnatural lengthx = \text{stretched length} - \text{natural length}
  2. Incorrectly applying the modulus of elasticity (λ\lambda): Use the correct value for the given spring or string.
  3. Mixing potential and elastic energy: Gravitational PE depends on height, while elastic PE depends on extension or compression.
  4. Ignoring zero values: When motion is at the natural length, EeE_e is zero.
  5. Units confusion: Ensure energy is always in joules (J)
infoNote

Key Formulas

  1. Elastic Potential Energy:
Ee=12λx2lE_e = \frac{1}{2} \frac{\lambda x^2}{l}
  1. Work-Energy Principle:
Work done by forces=ΔKE+ΔPE+ΔEe\text{Work done by forces} = \Delta KE + \Delta PE + \Delta E_e
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