Tests Flashcards

1
Q

How is the hardness test carried out?

A

Indentor forces into surface of material until it reaches equilibrium depth; diameter of impression is measured and related to an arbitrary hardness scale; material must plastically deform and flow away from moving indentor

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2
Q

Which hardness test uses a steel ball indentor?

A

Brinell test

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3
Q

Which hardness test uses a conical indentor?

A

Rockwell

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4
Q

Which hardness test uses a pyramid shaped indentor?

A

Vickers

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5
Q

Which hardness test uses an elongated pyramid indentor?

A

Knoop

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6
Q

What temperature is considered elevated enough to exacerbate creep?

A

0.4 melting point (in K)

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7
Q

Why do turbine blades so commonly creep?

A

Operate at temps close to Tm; material of Ni-alloy is high density = great stress; centrifugal forces = great stress

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8
Q

How does creep occur?

A

Movement of vacancies and grain boundaries

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9
Q

What is the most creep-resistance way to form turbine blades?

A

Make a single crystal

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10
Q

What is the least creep-resistant way to form turbine blades?

A

Chill cast forms a polycrystal

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11
Q

What does directional solidification do?

A

Aligns columnar crystals in direction of loading, such that the grain boundaries are parallel to the centrifugal force

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12
Q

What is creep tested?

A

Specimen held in furnace and deformation recorded, providing a characteristic creep curve

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13
Q

What is primary creep?

A

Instantaneous deformation, followed by a short period of relatively fast deformation

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14
Q

What is secondary creep?

A

Smaller constant rate of deformation; is the operating range of interest because is the period of known and predictable deformation

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15
Q

What is tertiary creep?

A

Crack occur in grain boundaries; increasing rate of deformation; leads to failure

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16
Q

What is fatigue?

A

Occurs due to cyclic loading with a stress below the normal failure stress of a material; originates from surface flaw; concentration of applied stress occurs at tip of flaw; crack initiates; crack grows with each application of load; when CSA is less than the area which can support the load, the crack rapidly propagates across the section; sudden failure

17
Q

What is fatigue failure characterised by?

A

Concentric rings (from slow propagation), then rough area (from rapid propagation)

18
Q

Why is fatigue testing difficult?

A

Difficult to extrapolate into reality as fatigue loading is so variable; tests exhibit a lot of scatter; tests are lengthy

19
Q

How can fatigue failure be reduced?

A

Improve surface finish; eliminate internal defects; design modifications to reduce stress raisers; surface treatments

20
Q

What are surface treatments which can reduce fatigue failure?

A

Shot-peening or carburising; will impart compressive residual stresses to surface and reduce surface-related crack initiation