'Henri Edouard Tresca' (
October 12,
1814 –
June 21,
1885) was a
French mechanical engineer, and a professor at the
Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers in
Paris.
He is the father of the field of plasticity, or non-recoverable deformations, which he explored in an extensive series of brilliant experiments begun in 1864. He is the discoverer of the Tresca (or maximal
shear stress) criterion of
material failure. The criterion specifies that a material would flow plastically if

Comparison of Tresca and Von Mises Criteria
.
Tresca's criterion is one of two main failure criteria used today. The second important criterion is due to
Von Mises. See comparison on the image left:
Tresca's stature as an engineer was such that
Gustave Eiffel put his name on number 3 in
his list of 72 people making the Eiffel tower in Paris possible.

National standard meter #27, primary US standard until 1960
Tresca was also among the designers of the
standard metre etalon. After the Treaty of the Meter had been signed in
1875, the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM) in Sevres, France made 28 prototype line standards of platinum-iridium. The bars had a modified X cross section named for the French scientist, Tresca who designed them. The Tresca section was designed to provide maximum rigidity. Small elliptical areas on the upper surface of the central rib at each end of the bars were highly polished, and three lines, nominally 0.5 mm apart, were ruled on these surfaces, the distance between the middle lines of each group defining the standard length. One of the bars was selected as the International Meter. The United States received National Prototype Meters No. 27 and No. 21 in 1890. When the
Mendenhall Order in
1893 declared the meter to be the fundamental length standard, No. 27 became the primary national standard for all length measurements. It remained so until
1960.
Tresca was made an honorary member of the
American Society of Mechanical Engineers in 1882.
See also
★
Yield surface
★
von Mises stress
★
Mohr-Coulomb theory
★
Yield (engineering)
★
Stress
★
Strain
★
3-D elasticity
External links
★ http://mechanima.upb.de/Geschichte/1814%20-%20Tresca/
★ http://www.asme.org/history/founders.html
★ http://museum.nist.gov/object.asp?ObjID=37