1.7. FURTHER READING 17
Figure 1.14: C-17 cargo ramp warped by the release of residual stresses within the material
machined away during manufacture (photo courtesy of D. Bowden, Boeing Company).
remaining material to relax partially. Chapter 2 describes many of these methods in more detail.
e Hole-Drilling Method, the subject of this book, is the most well-known and commonly
used relaxation/destructive method for measuring residual stresses.
1.7 FURTHER READING
• Ashby MF, Jones DRH (1980). Engineering Materials—An Introduction to their Properties
and Applications, Pergamon Press, Oxford, UK.
• Withers PJ, Bhadeshia HKDH (2001). Residual Stress. Part 2—Nature and Origins, Ma-
terials Science and Technology, 17(4):366–375.
• Withers PJ (2007). Residual Stress and its Role in Failure, Reports on Progress in Physics,
70(12):2211–2264.
• Hosford WF (2009). Mechanical Behavior of Materials, 2nd ed., Cambridge University
Press, Cambridge, UK, Chapter 18 in Residual Stresses.
• Niku-Lari A (Ed.) (1987). Advances in Surface Treatments, 4: Residual Stresses, Pergamon
Press, Oxford.
• Noyan IC, Cohen JB (1982). e Nature of Residual Stress and its Measurement, Chap-
ter 1 in Residual Stress and Stress Relaxation, Kula, E. (Ed.), Springer, New York.