Mechanical Testing - Tensile Testing, Part 1

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 4

Mechanical testing

Job knowledge 69:


Mechanical testing - Tensile testing, Part 1

Mechanical testing is carried out to produce
data that may be used for design purposes or
as part of a material joining procedure or
operator acceptance scheme. The most
important function may be that of providing
design data since it is essential that the limiting
values that a structure can withstand without
failure are known.
Inadequate control of the material properties by
the supplier, or incompetent joining procedures
and operatives are, however, equally crucial to
the supply of a product that is safe in use. An
example of this dual role of mechanical testing
is the tensile test that may be used either to
determine the yield strength of a steel for use
in design calculations or to ensure that the steel
complies with a material specification's strength
requirements.
Mechanical tests may also be divided into
quantitative or qualitative tests. A quantitative
test is one that provides data that will be used
for design purposes, a qualitative test where
the results will be used for making comparisons
- hardness or Charpy-V tests - for example as a 'go/no go test' such as the bend
test.
Mechanical property data are obtained from a relatively small number of standard
tests and these will be covered over the next several articles. These will include
tensile and toughness tests, the tests used for welding procedure and welder
approval and those used for the determination of in-service properties.
Tensile testing
As mentioned earlier the tensile test is used to provide information that will be
used in design calculations or to demonstrate that a material complies with the
requirements of the appropriate specification - it may therefore be either a
quantitative OR a qualitative test.
The test is made by gripping the ends of a suitably prepared standardised test
piece in a tensile test machine and then applying a continually increasing uni-axial
load until such time as failure occurs. Test pieces are standardised in order that
results are reproducible and comparable as shown in Fig 2.
Fig.1. Typical tensile testing
machine



Fig.2. Standard shape tensile specimens
Specimens are said to be proportional when the gauge length, L
0
, is related to
the original cross sectional area, A
0
, expressed as L
0
=k A
0
. The constant k
is 5.65 in EN specifications and 5 in the ASME codes. These give gauge lengths of
approximately 5x specimen diameter and 4x specimen diameter respectively -
whilst this difference may not be technically significant it is important when
claiming compliance with specifications.

Fig.3. Stress/strain curve
Both the load (stress) and the test piece extension (strain) are measured and
from this data an engineering stress/strain curve is constructed, Fig.3. From this
curve we can determine:
a) the tensile strength, also known as the ultimate tensile strength, the load at
failure divided by the original cross sectional area where the ultimate tensile

strength (U.T.S.),
max
= P
max
/A
0
, where P
max
= maximum load, A
0
= original
cross sectional area. In EN specifications this parameter is also identified as 'R
m
';
b) the yield point (YP), the stress at which deformation changes from elastic to
plastic behaviour ie below the yield point unloading the specimen means that it
returns to its original length, above the yield point permanent plastic deformation
has occurred, YP or y = P
yp
/A
0
where P
yp
= load at the yield point. In EN
specifications this parameter is also identified as 'R
e
';
c) By reassembling the broken specimen we can also measure the percentage
elongation, El% how much the test piece had stretched at failure where El% = (L
f

- L
0
/L
o
) x100 where Lf = gauge length at fracture and L0 = original gauge
length. In EN specifications this parameter is also identified as 'A' ( Fig.4a).
d) the percentage reduction of area, how much the specimen has necked or
reduced in diameter at the point of failure where R of A% =(A
0
- A
f
/A
0
) x 100
where A
f
= cross sectional area at site of the fracture. In EN specifications this
parameter is also identified as 'Z', ( Fig.4b).

Fig.4
a) Calculation of percentage
elongation
b) Calculation of percentage
reduction of area
(a) and (b) are measures of the strength of the material, (c) and (d) indicate the
ductility or ability of the material to deform without fracture.
The slope of the elastic portion of the curve, essentially a straight line, will give
Young's Modulus of Elasticity, a measure of how much a structure will elastically
deform when loaded.
A low modulus means that a structure will be flexible, a high modulus a structure
that will be stiff and inflexible.
To produce the most accurate stress/strain curve an extensometer should be
attached to the specimen to measure the elongation of the gauge length. A less
accurate method is to measure the movement of the cross-head of the tensile
machine.
The stress strain curve in Fig.3 shows a material that has a well pronounced yield
point but only annealed carbon steel exhibits this sort of behaviour. Metals that
are strengthened by alloying, by heat treatment or by cold working do not have a

pronounced yield and some other method must be found to determine the 'yield
point'.
This is done by measuring the proof stress ( offset yield strength in American
terminology), the stress required to produce a small specified amount of plastic
deformation in the test piece.
The proof stress is measured by drawing a line parallel to the elastic portion of the
stress/strain curve at a specified strain, this strain being a percentage of the
original gauge length, hence 0.2% proof, 1% proof (see Fig.5).

Fig.5. Determination of proof (offset yield)
strength
For example, 0.2% proof strength would be measured using 0.2mm of permanent
deformation in a specimen with a gauge length of 100mm. Proof strength is
therefore not a fixed material characteristic, such as the yield point, but will
depend upon how much plastic deformation is specified. It is essential therefore
when considering proof strengths that the percentage figure is always quoted.
Most steel specifications use 0.2% deformation, R
P0.2
in the EN specifications.
Some materials such as annealed copper, grey iron and plastics do not have a
straight line elastic portion on the stress/strain curve. In this case the usual
practice, analogous to the method of determining proof strength, is to define the
'yield strength' as the stress to produce a specified amount of permanent
deformation.
Part 2 of this series on mechanical testing will cover welding procedure approval
tensile testing.


This article was prepared by Gene Mathers.
Copyright 2004 TWI Ltd
Information and advice from TWI and its partners are provided in good faith and based, where appropriate,
on the best engineering knowledge available at the time and incorporated into TWI's website in
accordance with TWI's ISO 9001:2000 accredited status. No warranty expressed or implied is given
regarding the results or effects of applying information or advice obtained from the website, nor is any
responsibility accepted for any consequential loss or damage.

You might also like