Material Testing Methods
Material Testing Methods
The following mechanical tests have units (quantitative), but are qualitative
as the results are for comparison only.
• Charpy Impact tests.
• Hardness tests (Vickers, Brinell).
• Corrosion tests.
• Measurement
affected by
material 1
diameter
away.
Vickers Hardness Test
Objectives:
• Measuring impact strength in different
weld joint areas.
• Assessing resistance to brittle fracture.
Information on test report:
• Material type.
• Notch type.
• Specimen size.
• Test temperature.
• Notch location.
• Impact strength value.
Ductile/Brittle Transition Curve
Ductile fracture
Temperature range
47 Joules
28 Joules
Energy absorbed
Brittle fracture
- 50 - 40 - 30 - 20 - 10 0
Testing temperature, ºC
Charpy Impact Test
22.5o 10 mm
100% Brittle
2 mm
Machined
notch
Fracture surface
8 mm
100% bright
crystalline brittle
fracture
100% Ductile
Machined
notch
Large reduction in
area, shear lips
Randomly torn,
dull gray fracture
surface
Tensile Testing
Tensile Tests
Objective:
Measure the overall strength of the weld
joint.
Include in the results report:
• Material type.
• Specimen type (weld re-enforcement
removed? Reduced section specimen?).
• Specimen size.
• UTS.
• Location of final fracture.
• Whether any flaws are present.
Macro/Micro Examination
Specimen Preparation:
Reporting results:
• Thickness and dimensions of specimen.