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

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GTBL042-09 GTBL042-Callister-v3 October 4, 2007 11:53


2nd Revised Pages

9.8 Impact Fracture Testing • 311

10 mm
(0.39 in.)

Izod

Scale
Charpy

Pointer Starting position

End of swing

Specimen

Anvil

8 mm
(0.32 in.)

10 mm
(0.39 in.)

(a)

(b)

Notch

h'

Hammer

h

Figure 9.18 (a)
Specimen used for
Charpy and Izod
impact tests. (b)A
schematic drawing of
an impact testing
apparatus. The
hammer is released
from fixed heighth
and strikes the
specimen; the energy
expended in fracture
is reflected in the
difference betweenh
and the swing height
h′. Specimen
placements for both
Charpy and Izod
tests are also shown.
[Figure (b) adapted
from H. W. Hayden,
W. G. Moffatt, and
J. Wulff,The
Structure and
Properties of
Materials,Vol. III,
Mechanical Behavior,
p. 13. Copyright©c
1965 by John Wiley
& Sons, New York.
Reprinted by
permission of John
Wiley & Sons, Inc.]

fracture toughness tests are not as simple to perform as impact tests; furthermore,
equipment and specimens are more expensive.

Ductile-to-Brittle Transition
One of the primary functions of Charpy and Izod tests is to determine whether or
not a material experiences aductile-to-brittle transitionwith decreasing temperature

ductile-to-brittle
transition
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