Fundamentals of Materials Science and Engineering: An Integrated Approach, 3e

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GTBL042-07 GTBL042-Callister-v2 August 6, 2007 12:43


7.16 Hardness • 227

1000
800
600

200

300

400

100

80

60

40

20

Diamond

0

10

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

Talc

Gypsum

Calcite

Fluorite

Apatite

Orthoclase

Quartz

Topaz

Corundum
or
sapphire

10

5

20

50

100

200

500

1,000

2,000

5,000

10,000

Knoop
hardness

Brinell
hardness
Mohs
hardness

Rockwell
C

110

0

20

40

60

80

100

Rockwell
B

Easily
machined
steels

Nitrided steels

File hard

Cutting tools

Most
plastics

Brasses
and
aluminum
alloys

Figure 7.30
Comparison of
several hardness
scales. (Adapted
from G. F. Kinney,
Engineering
Properties and
Applications of
Plastics,p. 202.
Copyright©c1957 by
John Wiley & Sons,
New York.
Reprinted by
permission of John
Wiley & Sons, Inc.)

Metals.” In light of the preceding discussion, care should be exercised in extrapolation
of conversion data from one alloy system to another.

Correlation Between Hardness and Tensile Strength
Both tensile strength and hardness are indicators of a metal’s resistance to plastic
deformation. Consequently, they are roughly proportional, as shown in Figure 7.31,
for tensile strength as a function of the HB for cast iron, steel, and brass. The same
proportionality relationship does not hold for all metals, as Figure 7.31 indicates.
As a rule of thumb for most steels, the HB and the tensile strength are related accor-
ding to

TS(MPa)= 3. 45 ×HB (7.25a)
For steel alloys,
conversion of Brinell
hardness to tensile
strength
TS(psi)= 500 ×HB (7.25b)
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