Mechanical Testing of Steel & Metals: Tensile, Hardness & Impact Testing
Why Mechanical Testing Is Fundamental to Metal Qualification
Steel and metals are the structural backbone of modern civilization—bridges, buildings, pressure vessels, pipelines, vehicles, aircraft, and machinery all depend on metals performing predictably under load. Mechanical testing translates the complex microstructure and chemistry of a metal into quantitative engineering properties that designers, fabricators, and quality inspectors can use confidently.
From mill certification through in-service inspection and failure analysis, mechanical testing of steel and metals is performed across every lifecycle stage in the structural, oil and gas, aerospace, automotive, and heavy manufacturing industries.
Tensile Testing
ASTM E8 / E8M and ISO 6892-1
Tensile testing is the single most important mechanical test for metals. A machined specimen is gripped at both ends and pulled to failure at a controlled rate. The force-extension curve yields:
- Yield strength (Rp0.2 or ReH): Onset of plastic deformation
- Ultimate tensile strength (UTS/Rm): Peak engineering stress
- Elongation at break (A, %): Ductility—critical for formability and toughness
- Reduction of area (Z, %): Cross-sectional ductility at fracture
Specimen types: Round bar, flat sheet, or full-section for thin products. Specimen dimensions and gage length are tightly controlled—deviations affect elongation results.
Strain rate sensitivity: High-strength steels and aluminum alloys may show yield strength sensitivity to strain rate; test speed must be controlled and reported.
Hardness Testing
Brinell Hardness (ASTM E10 / ISO 6506)
A hardened ball (steel or carbide) is pressed into the metal surface under a defined load. The diameter of the indentation is measured and converted to Brinell Hardness Number (HBW). The large indentation area averages microstructural variability—ideal for cast iron, forgings, and coarse-grained materials.
Rockwell Hardness (ASTM E18 / ISO 6508)
An indenter (diamond cone for HRC/HRA; ball for HRB) is applied under a minor pre-load and then a major load. Hardness is read directly from the indentation depth difference. Fast, operator-friendly, and suitable for production line hardness verification.
Vickers Hardness (ASTM E92 / ISO 6507)
A square pyramid diamond indenter produces a geometrically similar indentation at any load. The diagonal length is measured optically. A single scale covers all hardness levels—from soft copper to hardened tool steel. The only hardness method used for microhardness traverses (case depth, weld HAZ profiles).
Impact Toughness Testing
Charpy V-Notch (ASTM E23 / ISO 148-1)
Already covered in detail in Blog 39, the CVN test remains the primary toughness verification method for structural, pressure vessel, and pipeline steels. Temperature series testing defines the ductile-to-brittle transition temperature (DBTT).
Izod Impact Test (ASTM E23)
A cantilever-geometry variant of Charpy; predominantly used for plastics today. Occasionally specified for metals in older standards.
Fatigue Testing
Stress-Life (S-N) Testing (ASTM E466 / E468)
Rotating bending or axial fatigue tests at multiple stress amplitudes generate the S-N (Wöhler) curve. The fatigue strength (endurance limit for steels) and fatigue life at specific stress amplitudes guide component design and material selection.
Fatigue Crack Growth Rate (ASTM E647)
Compact tension (CT) or single-edge notch (SEN) specimens with a pre-existing crack are cyclically loaded. Crack length is measured vs. cycle count; the da/dN vs. ΔK (Paris curve) governs damage-tolerant design and inspection interval calculations in aerospace and pressure equipment.
Fracture Toughness Testing (ASTM E399 / E1820)
Fracture toughness (KIc) is the critical stress intensity factor at which a pre-existing crack will propagate catastrophically. It is the fundamental parameter for damage-tolerant design and the most demanding mechanical test—requiring tight specimen geometry tolerances, fatigue pre-cracking, and precise load-displacement measurement.
Why Choose Infinita Lab for Mechanical Testing of Steel and Metals?
Infinita Lab is a leading provider of mechanical testing services for steel and metals, offering tensile, hardness, Charpy impact, fatigue, and fracture toughness testing per ASTM, ISO, ASME, and API standards. Our nationwide accredited laboratory network provides reliable results with rapid turnaround for mill certification, fabrication inspection, and failure analysis.
Looking for a trusted partner to achieve your research goals? Schedule a meeting with us, send us a request, or call us at (888) 878-3090 to learn more about our services and how we can support you. Request a Quote
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
What is the difference between yield strength and proof strength? Yield strength (ReH or ReL) is the stress at which a well-defined yield point is observed—common in low-carbon steels that show a distinct upper and lower yield point. Proof strength (Rp0.2) is used for metals without a distinct yield point (most alloy steels, aluminum, stainless steel): it is the stress producing a 0.2% permanent (plastic) strain offset from the elastic line.
Why are multiple hardness scales used rather than one universal scale? Different hardness scales are optimized for different hardness ranges and material types. Brinell is best for soft to medium-hard materials with coarse microstructures. Rockwell C (HRC) covers hard steels above ~30 HRC. Rockwell B covers soft metals. Vickers covers the complete range at any load. Using the wrong scale produces unreliable indentation geometry and inaccurate results.
What is the relationship between tensile strength and Brinell hardness for steel? For carbon and low-alloy steels, the empirical relationship: UTS (MPa) ≈ 3.45 × HBW (from ASTM A370 and ISO 18265) allows hardness measurements to estimate tensile strength. This is only approximate—it does not apply to stainless steels, non-ferrous metals, or highly alloyed steels where the work-hardening behavior differs significantly from carbon steel.
What is the minimum specimen thickness for valid KIc testing? ASTM E399 requires the specimen thickness (B) and initial crack length (a) to both satisfy: B, a ≥ 2.5(KIc/σys)². For high-strength steels with KIc of 50 MPa√m and σys of 1,400 MPa, this requires B ≥ 3.2 mm. For tough steels with KIc of 200 MPa√m, the required thickness becomes 51 mm—a specimen that may exceed available material thickness, requiring the J-integral method (ASTM E1820) instead.
How are fatigue test specimens prepared for ASTM E466 axial fatigue testing? ASTM E466 specimens are machined from bar or plate material to a smooth, polished surface finish (Ra ≤ 0.4 µm) in the gage section. No surface defects, tool marks, or scratches are permitted in the gage section. The gage section diameter, transition radius (to prevent stress concentration at the shoulder), and surface finish must all meet the specification tolerances defined in ASTM E466.