Hardness Testers

Challenges of Hardness Testing on Ceramic Materials

Available from QATM, Part of Verder Scientific

Challenges of Hardness Testing on Ceramic Materials

Content Summary

n industries, such as medical engineering, automotive or electrics, technical ceramics are
used in a variety of products and also for coatings of components which have to be highly
wear-resistant or temperature-resistant as well as non-conductive or non-corrosive. Beside
characteristics like low density or limited thermal dilatation, ceramic materials also show high
hardness but low fracture toughness and a high elastic modulus. Due to these mechanical
qualities, ceramics are used, for example, in capacitors, isolators, cutting nozzles or blades,
bearings, pumps or powder-coated metal surfaces.
Hardness testing is particularly important to prove the mechanical strength of ceramic work
pieces which are highly affected by wear; typical examples are friction bearings, brake disks or
turbine blades.
Probably the most common hardness testing method for ceramics is the Vickers procedure,
usually with low-load test forces; but Knoop is also applicable for hardness tests on ceramiccoated layers due to its little indentation depth and minor crack formation

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