MECHANICAL TESTING
Elevated Temperature Tensile Testing - ASTM E 21
"Elevated Temperature Tension Tests of Metallic Materials"
Touchstone Research Laboratory has performed tens of thousands of
tensile tests in its mechanical testing laboratories in a wide variety
of materials.
Touchstone is equipped to perform elevated tensile tests from cryogenic
temperatures up to 4,200 degrees Fahrenheit. Touchstone is also
equipped to perform thermal fatigue as well as tensile testing in
a wide array of environments.
ASTM E21 covers the procedure and equipment for the determination
of tensile strength, yield strength, elongation, and reduction of
area of metallic materials at elevated temperatures.
The elevated-temperature tension test gives a useful estimate of
the static load-carrying capacity of metals under short-time, tensile
loading. Using established and conventional relationships it can
be used to give some indication of probable behavior under other
simple states of stress, such as compression, shear, etc. The ductility
values give a comparative measure of the capacity of different materials
to deform locally without cracking and thus to accommodate a local
stress concentration or overstress: however, quantitative relationships
between tensile ductility and the effect of stress concentrations
at elevated temperature are not universally valid. A similar comparative
relationship exists between tensile ductility and strain-controlled,
low-cycle fatigue life under simple states of stress. The results
of these tension tests can be considered as only a questionable
comparative measure of the strength and ductility for service times
of thousands of hours. Therefore, the principal usefulness of the
elevated-temperature tension test is to assure that the tested material
is similar to reference material when other measures such as chemical
composition and microstructure also show the two materials are similar.
Index of Mechanical Testing
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