Mechanical testing
Application of forces or torques to a material or structure to determine its mechanical properties From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mechanical testing covers a wide range of tests, which can be divided broadly into two types:
- those that aim to determine a material's mechanical properties, independent of geometry.[1]
- those that determine the response of a structure to a given action, e.g. testing of composite beams, aircraft structures to destruction, etc.
Mechanical testing of materials
Summarize
Perspective
There exists a large number of tests, many of which are standardized, to determine the various mechanical properties of materials. In general, such tests set out to obtain geometry-independent properties; i.e. those intrinsic to the bulk material. In practice this is not always feasible, since even in tensile tests, certain properties can be influenced by specimen size and/or geometry. Here is a listing of some of the most common tests:[2]
- Hardness Testing
- Vickers hardness test (HV), which has one of the widest scales
- Brinell hardness test (HB)
- Knoop hardness test (HK), for measurement over small areas
- Janka hardness test, for wood
- Meyer hardness test
- Rockwell hardness test (HR), principally used in the USA
- Shore durometer hardness, used for polymers
- Barcol hardness test, for composite materials
- Tensile testing, used to obtain the stress-strain curve for a material, and from there, properties such as Young modulus, yield (or proof) stress, tensile stress and % elongation to failure.
- Impact testing
- Fracture toughness testing
- Linear-elastic (KIc)
- K–R curve
- Elastic plastic (JIc, CTOD)
- Creep Testing, for the mechanical behaviour of materials at high temperatures (relative to their melting point)
- Fatigue Testing, for the behaviour of materials under cyclic loading
- Load-controlled smooth specimen tests
- Strain-controlled smooth specimen tests
- Fatigue crack growth testing
- Non-Destructive Testing
References
General references
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