Material Testing and Properties

How engineers characterize metals through tensile, hardness, impact, and non-destructive testing, and what the numbers mean for real-world applications.

1

Understanding Tensile Testing

The tensile test is the most fundamental mechanical test in materials engineering. A single test produces yield strength, tensile strength, elongation, and Young's modulus, providing the primary data used for design calculations and material acceptance.

672 words · 3 min read
2

Hardness Testing Methods Compared

Hardness testing is the most common quick check for material condition and heat treatment effectiveness. Rockwell, Brinell, and Vickers tests each have specific strengths. Knowing which to use and how to convert between scales avoids errors in quality control and specification.

812 words · 4 min read
3

Impact Testing and Fracture Toughness

A material's tensile strength says nothing about how it behaves under sudden loading or at low temperatures. Charpy and Izod impact tests, and the fracture toughness parameter K₃c, answer these questions for design-critical applications.

718 words · 4 min read
4

Non-Destructive Testing Methods

Non-destructive testing (NDT) detects defects in components without removing them from service or destroying them. Choosing the right NDT method depends on the defect type, material, geometry, and required sensitivity.

873 words · 4 min read