Hello, dear friend, you can consult us at any time if you have any questions, add WeChat: THEend8_
ENSC1004 1 Lab 1 - Manual
ENSC1004 Engineering Materials
Lab 1 Manual: Tensile Testing of Materials
Attention:
(1) Read this lab manual carefully before attending your lab session and also before
commencing your Lab Report.
(2) The report will count towards 10% of the final grade for this unit.
(3) If you are doing the unit in online teaching mode, you must watch the lab demonstration
video. Sample data will be supplied to you and this manual should serve as a reference.
(4) A completed individual lab report is to be submitted via LMS by the specific due date that
is applicable to you. A submission link will be provided in the Lab 1 folder which is set to
be adaptively released for each lab class.
1. Objective
The purpose of this lab is to give the class further insight into the tensile deformation behavior
of materials. In the lab you will carry out tensile testing of specimens made of different
materials using a benchtop tester to obtain the stress-strain curves of the tested materials.
2. Lab Procedures
2.1 Tensile Testing Specimen
2.1.1 Testing specimens
To obtain tensile deformation behavior of a particular material, it must be prepared in the form
of a test specimen. For this lab, test specimens have been prepared from the following
materials:
• Aluminum alloy
• Mild steel
• Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC)
2.1.2 Geometry and dimension of the testing specimen
Figure 1. shows the tensile testing specimen and the nominal (approximate) dimensions of the
specimen for reference. All specimens have the same nominal dimensions.
Figure 1. Nominal dimensions of the testing specimens.
ENSC1004 2 Lab 1 - Manual
As shown in Figure 1, the tensile testing specimen has a unique dumbbell shape. Each specimen
has a large flat area at two ends connected by a thin section. The machine holds the flat areas
and stretches the thin section during testing.
To accurately measure the dimensions of the test specimens, dial calipers are to be used. The
length of the specimen is defined as the gauge length as shown in Figure 2.
Figure 2. Gauge length before and after tensile deformation of a testing specimen.
In this lab, the test specimens will be deformed to rupture. To determine the final gauge length
of a test specimen (after it has broken), the two ruptured pieces needs to be put back together
at the fracture surface to measure the final length, as shown in Figure 2.
2.2 Experimental Setup
Figure 3 shows the benchtop tensile tester and Figure 4 presents the front view of the tester.
Figure 3. Tensile tester
ENSC1004 3 Lab 1 - Manual
Figure 4. Front view of the tensile tester
As shown in Figure 4, the key components of the tester are described as following:
(1) Specimen mount
The specimen is mounted by attaching it to the chucks (L-shaped solid metal blocks) and
held in place by two machine screws with hexagonal socket heads (meaning they are
adjusted with an Allen key or hex wrench).
(2) Mechanism to apply the tensile force
The top chuck is connected to a threaded metal rod. The rod passes through the load nut,
at the top of tensile testing apparatus. Turning the load nut clockwise pulls up the threaded
rod and hence the top chuck. Turning the load nut is what applies and controls the tensile
force experienced by the test specimen. Each full rotation of the load nut draws the
threaded rod upward by 1 mm and hence gives the displacement of the top chuck.
(3) Mechanism to induce and measure the displacement
The bottom chuck is connected to the bottom plate of the testing apparatus. The bottom
plate is connected to two compression springs with a known spring constant. When the
bottom chuck is pulled up (by the tensile force in the test specimen), the chuck pulls up on
the bottom plate, compressing the springs. The bottom plate also presses the extension rod
of the dial indicator. The dial indicator therefore, measures the displacement of the bottom
ENSC1004 4 Lab 1 - Manual
chuck (which is equal to the displacement of the springs). The force in the tensile test
specimen can be calculated from the spring constant and measured displacement.
(4) What are the directly measured data?
During the experiment the two things that can be directly measured are the (fractional)
number of turns of the load nut which corresponds to the displacement of the top chuck
and the dial indicator reading which corresponds to the displacement of the bottom chuck.
(5) How are they related to the extension and force?
The change in length of the test specimen (i.e. the extension) is the difference between the
displacement of the top chuck (given by the number of rotations of the load nut) and the
displacement of the bottom chuck (given by the dial indicator). The force experienced by
the test specimen is calculated by multiplying the spring constant by the displacement of
the bottom chuck.
2.3 Testing Procedure
The tensile tester as shown in Figure 3 is simple to use. Two chucks hold a specimen. The Load
Nut at the top of the tester pulls the top chuck upwards, pulling the specimen up by 1 mm per
complete turn. The Load Nut has a small notch and a scale divided into ten increments that
help you to see how far you have turned the control on each turn (each increment shows an
upward pull of 0.1 mm). The bottom chuck connects to the two large springs. A Dial Indicator
measures the deflection of the springs as you apply force. The springs obey Hooke’s Law, so
the measurement from the Dial Indicator helps to show force.
2.3.1 Fitting or Removing a Specimen
(1) To fit a new specimen or remove a broken specimen, remove the Safety Guard and use the
Allen key to undo the specimen fixings and refit them on the new specimen, see Figure
5.
(2) When fitting a new specimen, you may need to turn the Load Nut a few turns for the
specimen to fit correctly.
(3) Refit the Safety Guard.
Figure 5. Removing the safety guard and specimen using the hexagonal Allen key
ENSC1004 5 Lab 1 - Manual
2.3.2 Setting the Dial Indicator to Zero
When you fit a new specimen, carefully turn the force control clockwise until the Dial
Indicator just starts to show a movement and the notch of the Force Control points to
one of the ten marks of its circular scale. Now turn the outer bezel of the dial indicator
so that its pointer aligns with the 0 (zero) value, see Figure 6.
Figure 6. Zero the dial gauge
2.3.3 Testing
(1) Choose your specimen and use the Dial Calipers to measure the gauge length, and the
thickness and width at the gauge length. Record these measurements.
(2) Fit the specimen to the Tensile Tester and set the Dial Indicator to zero.
(3) For the metal specimens, slowly turn the Load Nut clockwise in small 0.2 mm steps until
the specimen breaks. For the PVC specimen begin by turning the load nut in 0.1 mm
increments up to 2 mm, then in 0.5 mm steps up to 5 mm, then 1 mm steps up until 10
mm followed by 10 mm steps until the specimen breaks or it become impossible to raise
the top plate further.
• Keep the applied rate consistent (for example: take five seconds to turn the Load Nut
through each 0.2 mm and then take five seconds to record the reading).
• At each step, record the Dial Indicator value (attention: you should have prepared the
table for recording the testing data following the Table Template provided in this
manual before commencing the lab).
• For the PVC specimens, after the yield point, the Dial Indicator reading slowly drops
each time you turn the Load Nut, and may continue dropping for many minutes.
• For this reason, you must record the value as soon as you change the load to give
consistent results.
• Metal specimens may not break until an extension of between 1 mm and 5 mm PVC
specimens may not break until an extension of between 20 and 50 mm (if at all).
(4) To check the elongation, remove the specimen from the tester and push its broken ends
together then measure its final length with the dial calipers.
ENSC1004 6 Lab 1 - Manual
3. Results
3.1 Place all data in a combined Excel spreadsheet, following the Table template provided in
3.7. One table for each specimen tested.
3.2 Place measured experimental data in the first two columns.
3.3 Determine the force values
The Dial Indicator also gives an indication of the force applied to the specimen. The
springs have a combined spring rate of 100 N/mm. The Dial Indicator gives a direct reading
of the change in spring length, so each mm change is equal to a change of force of 100
N, i.e.
Force (N) = Dial Indicator reading (mm) x 100
For example, assuming you have correctly set the Dial Indicator to zero and it reads 2.83
mm after you apply the force, then the force is 283 N.
3.4 Determine the extension values
Subtract the Dial Indicator readings from the Load Nut movement readings to get the
extension at each step, i.e.
Extension (mm) = Number of turns of the Load Nut (mm) - Dial Indicator Reading (mm)
For example, if you have turned the load nut three complete turns (3.0 mm) and the Dial
Indicator reading is 2.83 mm, then the extension = 3.00 - 2.83 = 0.17 mm.
3.5 Determine the stress and nominal strain values.
3.6 Plot the stress-strain curve for each specimen tested using Excel, following the figure
template provided in 3.7.
3.7 Table and Figure templates
Attention: all Figures and Tables presented in your lab report should have captions. It is
a convention that a Table caption be placed on top of the Table and a figure caption to be
placed at the bottom of the Figure. The caption needs to provide sufficient information
about the Figure or Table presented. Each Table or Figure should be given a sequential
number throughout the report. When describing the Table or Figure, you should refer to
their Table number of Figure number (e.g. ‘as shown in Table 2….’ or as seen in Figure
5…).
For the data table and any (summary) results table(s) please show a reasonable number
of digits for numerical values; if you are unclear about how may digits are reasonable
please review the rules for significant figures and look at the data you’ve collected and
the mathematical operations being performed on that data.
For the figures, it is important to note that ‘symbols’ (data points) must be shown in the
experimentally determined stress-strain curves, as they display the actual data points
measured in the experiment. You may join the data points if you feel it helps with the
data visualization but that is a matter of personal taste.
Though Excel gives you the option to add a title on top of graphs, the general rule is NOT
to repeat information. Since every figure must have a caption, it makes the title on the top
of the figure redundant.
As shown in the figure template, there should be no grid-lines on the figure. However,
you should have ticks for both axes; the ticks define the position of specified values, thus
making the numerical axes meaningful. Furthermore, format the numbers shown on the
axes to avoid displaying terminal zeros to the right of the decimal place.
ENSC1004 7 Lab 1 - Manual
Table Template
Table #. Tensile Testing Results for ####
Specimen Material:
Original Cross-sectional Area (mm2): Original Length (mm):
Measured Data Calculated Data
Load Nut
Movement
(mm)
Dial
Indicator
(mm)
Force (N) Extension
(mm)
Stress
(MPa)
Nominal
Strain
0.0
0.2
0.4
….
Figure Template
Figure #. The tensile stress-strain curve for ###
3.8 Data analysis
From the stress-strain curves and tabulated data, determine the Young’s modulus, yield
strength, tensile strength and ductility for each specimen. Annotate the stress-strain
curve for steel to show how these values are obtained. Present these data (Young’s
modulus, yield strength, tensile strength and ductility) in a summary results table.
Note: For metals the “yield” concept is very clear and the “yield strength” is well defined
(using the 0.002 strain-offset rule from the stress-strain curve). For polymers, however,
the stress-strain behavior varies widely. The initial tensile stress-strain curve can be
practically linear or very non-linear. Therefore, it is not practical to have one definition
of yield strength for all polymers. In the case of PVC, the stress-strain curve displays an
initial maximum, followed by softening (weakening) and then extensive plastic
deformation till final failure. This maximum stress is effectively the ultimate tensile
strength of the PVC. This point is also considered to be the “yield strength” for this
material.
ENSC1004 8 Lab 1 - Manual
Note: Do not expect your results to be exactly as shown in the theory. Theory always
shows ‘perfect’ or ‘ideal’ results, based on perfect testing conditions. Your ‘actual’ results
will often be different from theory. How different they are, depends upon the accuracy of
the equipment used and how carefully the experiment is conducted.
Note: For ductility it is possible to determine the elongation either through graphical
analysis of the stress-strain curve or through measuring the initial and final (after failure)
lengths of a given tensile test specimen. Because of the limits of the tensile tester
apparatus used in the experiment, the two methods will give different results. Since we
can measure the initial and final lengths with high confidence, this is the preferred method
for calculating the ductility for the summary results table. However, you must show how
to find ductility graphically on the annotated stress-strain curve.
4. Discussion
Discuss the testing results by answering the following questions.
(1) What are the main differences among the three materials tested from the stiffness, strength
and ductility perspectives based on the stress-strain curves obtained?
(2) How do the measured Young’s moduli of the three materials compare to the “handbook
value” of 69, 210 and 3 GPa for aluminum alloy, steel and PVC, respectively? Calculate
the percent difference. (Note: it is likely that your values for Young’s modulus are
significantly different from the reported values for the three materials tested. This does
not mean you have done something wrong. The question is what the likely cause is for
such measurement errors. I encourage you to think in terms of the likely source of errors
in the testing set up we have, particularly in terms if it is more likely from the applied
force or the displacement.)
5. Deliverables
You are required to submit an individual Lab Report in one (1) PDF file, which should contain
all of the following.
5.1 The UWA Coversheet
A filled and signed UWA Coversheet has to be submitted with the report. The coversheet
is available in the Lab-1 folder in LMS.
The whole lab report, including the UWA Coversheet (which should be placed before
your report title page) must be compiled into one document for submission. However, the
coversheet is not included in the 10-page limit for the report.
5.2 The Report
The report should be presented professionally and adhere to the formatting guideline
specified in 5.3. It must include the following components:
(1) A title page, including the report title, your name, student number and a table of
contents.
(2) Introduction: a brief discussion of what this report is about and what materials are
being tested and what properties are determined.
(3) Experimental: a brief description in your own words of the experimental procedure
you have learnt from reading this lab manual and performing the lab.
(4) Results:
• Describe the detailed calculation procedure i.e. the steps and equations that you
ENSC1004 9 Lab 1 - Manual
used to calculate the values of stress and strain. Use one example (based on the
mild steel data) to demonstrate this.
• Present the testing data and also the calculated data in tables (following the Table
Template provided in 3.7). Provide an appropriate table caption for each table (on
top of the table, as a convention). Put only the data table for mild steel in the
results section; the data tables for aluminum and PVC should be placed in
an appendix to the report.
• Plot the stress-strain curve for each specimen. Ensure you label the diagram
appropriately and provide a caption for each figure (on the bottom of the figure, as
a convention). Put only the stress-strain curve for mild steel in the results
section; the curves for aluminum and PVC should be placed in an appendix
to the report.
• Determine the modulus, yield strength, tensile strength and ductility for each tested
material. Annotate the stress-strain curve for steel to show how these values are
determined. Present these material’s property values in a summary table for all
materials tested. Ensure the data columns are properly labelled and a caption given
to the summary table.
(5) Discussion: answer the questions listed in Section 4.
(6) Conclusions: provide a short paragraph to summarize the main findings of this lab.
(7) Appendix: there should be an appendix for this lab report for the data tables and
figures of aluminum and PVC.