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Introduction to Tensile Testing

K.K. Bajpai
Chief Scientific Officer
Structural Engineering Laboratory
IIT Kanpur
IMPORTANCE OF Tensile Test

 Strength of a material is the primary concern.


 The strength may be measured in terms of
 the stress at which plastic deformation is observed (yield
stress), or
 the maximum stress that the material can withstand
(ultimate tensile strength).
 These measures of strength are used, with appropriate
caution in engineering design.
 Material’s ductility is another important property, which
is a measure of how much it can be deformed before it
fractures.
 Low ductility in a tensile test often is accompanied by
low resistance to fracture.
IMPORTANCE OF Tensile Test

 The results are used in selecting materials for


engineering applications.
 Tensile properties are included in material
specifications to ensure quality.
 Tensile properties are measured during
development of new materials and processes.
 Tensile properties are often used to predict the
behavior of a material under forms of loading
other than uni-axial tension.
Tensile Test
Tensile Test contd…

Important Regions:

• Elastic region
• Yielding
• Strain Hardening
• Necking

• Fracture

Note: Very little difference


between engineering and
true values in elastic region.
Tensile Test contd…
Ductility and Percent Elongation

 Ductility is the degree to which a material will


deform before ultimate fracture.
 Percent elongation is used as a measure of
ductility.
 Ductile Materials have %E ≥ 5%
 Brittle Materials have %E < 5%
 For members subject to repeated or shock or
impact loads, materials with %E > 12% are
recommended.
Ductile materials -
extensive plastic
deformation and
energy absorption
(toughness) before
fracture

Brittle materials –
little plastic deformation
and low energy
absorption before failure
DUCTILE VS BRITTLE FAILURE
• Classification:

(a) (b) (c)


• Ductile Ductile: Brittle: No
fracture is warning before warning
desirable! fracture
DUCTILE FAILURE

“cup and cone” fracture


Tensile Test contd…

Tensile Specimens.
Enlarged ends for gripping.
Gage section
The distances between the ends of the gage
section and the shoulders should be great enough
so that the larger ends do not constrain
deformation within the gage section.
A variety of testing
machine types
(electromechanical,
hydraulic, closed-
loop servo-hydraulic,
and sizes…
…and a variety of samples sizes.
Tensile Test contd…
Tensile Test contd…
Tensile Test contd…

 Gear Driven (or Screw Driven Machines)


 Crosshead speed
 .001 to 500 mm/min
 1 to 20 mm/min for quasi static testing

 Servo-Hydraulic Machines
 Crosshead speed
 1μm/h for creep/fatigue
 1 cycle/day to 200 cycles/s for cyclic tests
 1μm/min for tensile tests of brittle materials
 10 m/s to 30m/s for dynamic tests
(testing of seat belts/bumpers/shock absorbers etc.)
Tensile Test contd…
Tensile Test contd…
Load and Displacement
Control modes

Stress
Stress
OR
OR Load
Load

Strain Strain
OR OR
Displacement Displacement
Stress-Strain Behaviour of Concrete

Important Regions:
Tensile Stress vs Strain
1000

900

800

700

Stress(MPa)
600

500

400

300

200

100

0
0 0.005 0.01 0.015 0.02
Strain

Setup at MTS
Stress vs strain curve for GFRP-epoxy bar is
shown with σu=818 MPa and E =49.5865 GPa
Stiffness of Testing Machine

L0 L0+Δ L0+Δ - F/K


Stiffness of Testing Machine..
Stiffness of Testing Machine Contd..

If the machine is stiff with respect to the specimen, the


post-peak curve can be followed. Energy in excess of
that released by the machine as stored strain energy
must be supplied in order to deform the specimen along
ABC.
Stiffness of Testing Machine Contd..

 Solid steel columns provide an


exceptionally stiff load frame that stores a
minimum amount of elastic energy giving
better control of specimen failure

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