Sunday 28 April 2013

Indentation Hardness

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Among the three hardness types shared in the previous article, indentation hardness is the one which most engineers are familiar with. In fact, I bet that the general reply to the definition of hardness matches that of indentation hardness so much so that they are interchangeable in most discussions. Even engineering textbooks seldom mention indentation hardness as a separate topic – it is instead discussed as a hardness topic without an in-depth subtopic on other hardness types. 

Ball indenter used for Rockwell hardness testing. Different macroindentation test methods uses different indenter geometry and measures different dimensions of the indentation geometry (image taken from Instron).

Indentation hardness quantifies the resistance of a sample to material deformation, plastic deformation to be specific, due to the effect of a constant compressive load of a sharp object, hence the term “indentation”. In this test, a specific indenter is exerted onto the test material until an indentation is formed, of which dimension is measured and determines the hardness in accordance to a certain scale. 

For engineers personally involved in testing materials, it would be important to understand that most indentation tests have specific load rate and specific dwell time (the period in which the indenter load is held without moving), but not all of them are so. 

Macro, Micro and Nano 

Depending on the load that is applied, the indentation hardness measurement method could be divided into 3 different categories: 

  1. Macroindentation test: This is the usual method which most of us use. The load applied is larger, typically more than 100N (~1kgf). The usual hardness scales of Rockwell hardness (HR), Brinell hardness (HB) and Vickers hardness (HV) are part of this category. 
  2. Microindentation test: Tests with lower applied load, typically less than 2N (~200gf), although the range of test load can reach up to 1kgf and still fall within this category. 
  3. Nanoindentation test: This test is so named because of an even lower applied load, ranging from 1µN to 100mN. At such small loads, the indentation area is only a few square micrometers across, even in nanometer scale, hence the name. 

There are a variety of hardness scales within macroindentation hardness, each of them different from the other in the employment of different indenter, indenter tip geometry, dimension of indentation geometry being measured and the expected material upon which the method is employed upon. This is a topic which I could share in another article in itself base on what I understand as well as on what I read from different sources. 

Indentation of a Niobium sample using a silicon tip, viewed under Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM). Nanoindentation creates very small dent geometry which is invisible to the naked eye (image taken from Kleindiek Nanotecknik).

A Comparative Property 

Hardness cannot be considered as a fundamental property. It is an arbitrary quantity which provides a comparative idea of the material’s resistance against plastic deformation against a predetermined scale. 

As different measurement method provides different scale, the scale themselves have no simple relationship between each other, although comparison charts can be used to convert to an approximate value in another scale for certain materials. These comparison charts are material specific, so a comparison chart for alloy steel may not be useful for aluminum alloy. 

A comparison graph between Rockwell hardness scale and Vickers hardness scale. No mathematical exact conversion is possible, and conversion between scales are only approximate. Extrapolation is not advised due to this particular reason (image taken from Surface Engineering Forum).

Surface or Bulk Property? 

Seldom emphasized is the fact that hardness is more dependent on surface property than bulk property. The general idea of indentation hardness testing is to measure material properties, especially tensile strength, in a less destructive manner rather than break apart a sample piece just to measure its property. For quality control, this is a rather important aspect since a quick measurement with a handheld Rockwell hardness tester could determine a batch’s property through a quick and inconspicuous dent on the surface of a few cast ingots. 

But hardening methods such as precipitation hardening and work hardening, as well as passivating film which formed naturally on the surface of metal, are only superficial. Just because the surface is hard, it does not represent the core of the material bulk to be in the same condition. 

FE-SEM (Field Emission Scanning Electrion Microscopy) image of a 3-layer passivation film (MgF2/Mg-Zn-F/MgF2) passivation film sputtered on PEN. The overall thickness of the film is only about 200nm. Hardness of such thin material may require the use of nanoindentation hardness testing (image taken from ScienceDirect on the topic of "Evaluation of Thin Film Passivation Using Inorganic Mg-Zn-F Heterointerface for Polymer LED).

What indentation hardness could do which a uniaxial tensile test cannot is to determine the said surface property, such as the strength of a coating film or passivating film. The film could be micrometers thick, and cannot be separated from the bulk material in a nondestructive manner and still reveal its mechanical property. 

It would be important to note that surface finishes will not influence hardness, but may affect the measurement if the indentation geometry is not large compared to the surface roughness. The dimensions of an indentation on a mirror finished surface will prove to be much easier to measure with the indented geometry clearly defined against its surroundings. Finding the edges of the small dent in a rough surface may be akin to finding a needle in a haystack.




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4 comments:

  1. Ames has been providing precision measurement tools for over 50 years. Our Rockwell metal portable hardness testers are always accurate and reliable. Krautkramer Dynapocket

    ReplyDelete
  2. Good information about indentation hardness. People from non-destructive testing industry would find it useful. Thanks for sharing this with us!

    ReplyDelete

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