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Vickers hårdhed×Finite Element Analysis×Nanoindentation×
FagområdeMaterialevidenskabMaterialevidenskabMaterialevidenskab
FamilieProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Oprindelsesår192219431992
OphavspersonSmith and SandlandRichard CourantWarren Oliver
TypeHardness testComputational methodMeasurement method
Oprindelig kildeSmith, E., & Sandland, G. E. (1922). An accurate method of determining the hardness of metals with particular reference to high-hardness alloys. The Institution of Steel Engineers, 8, 623-641. link ↗Zienkiewicz, O. C., & Taylor, R. L. (1977). The Finite Element Method in Engineering Science. McGraw-Hill. link ↗Oliver, W. C., & Pharr, G. M. (1992). An improved technique for determining hardness and elastic modulus using load and displacement sensing indentation experiments. Journal of Materials Research, 7(6), 1564-1583. DOI ↗
AliasserVickers hardness test, Vickers microhardness, HVFEA, finite element methodnanoindentation, instrumented indentation, depth-sensing indentation
Relaterede343
ResuméVickers Hardness testing is a mechanical characterization technique for determining material hardness by pressing a diamond pyramid indenter into a material surface under controlled load and measuring the resulting indent dimensions. Invented by Smith and Sandland in 1922, Vickers hardness is applicable across an enormous hardness range (1-2000 HV) using the same indenter geometry at different loads. It is the most versatile hardness test, widely used in materials science, metallurgy, and quality control for assessing material strength and comparing alloy performance.Finite Element Analysis (FEA) is a numerical technique for obtaining approximate solutions to boundary value problems described by differential equations. Developed systematically by Richard Courant in 1943 and popularized by Clough in the 1960s, FEA divides a complex domain into smaller, simpler elements to solve engineering problems involving stress, strain, heat transfer, and fluid flow. It is the dominant computational method in materials science for predicting material behavior under various loading conditions.Nanoindentation, or instrumented indentation, is a technique for measuring the hardness and elastic modulus of materials by pressing a hard probe into a sample surface and continuously recording load and penetration depth. Developed by Oliver and Pharr in 1992, nanoindentation enables measurement of mechanical properties of thin films, small volumes, and nanoscale structures with spatial resolution approaching micrometers. It is the standard tool in materials science for characterizing coatings, interfaces, and mechanical properties at the submicron scale.
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ScholarGateSammenlign metoder: Vickers Hardness · Finite Element Analysis · Nanoindentation. Hentet 2026-06-18 fra https://scholargate.app/da/compare