Vickers Hardness Test
The Vickers hardness test method consists of indenting
the test material with a diamond indenter, in the form of a
right pyramid with a square base and an angle of 136 degrees
between opposite faces subjected to a load of 1 to 100 kgf. The
full load is normally applied for 10 to 15 seconds. The two
diagonals of the indentation left in the surface of the material
after removal of the load are measured using a microscope and
their average calculated. The area of the sloping surface of the
indentation is calculated. The Vickers hardness is the quotient
obtained by dividing the kgf load by the square mm area of
indentation.
F= Load in kgf
d = Arithmetic mean of the two diagonals, d1 and
d2 in mm
HV = Vickers hardness
When the mean diagonal of the indentation has been determined
the Vickers hardness may be calculated from the formula, but is
more convenient to use conversion tables. The Vickers hardness
should be reported like 800 HV/10, which means a Vickers
hardness of 800, was obtained using a 10 kgf force. Several
different loading settings give practically identical hardness
numbers on uniform material, which is much better than the
arbitrary changing of scale with the other hardness testing
methods. The advantages of the Vickers hardness test are that
extremely accurate readings can be taken, and just one type of
indenter is used for all types of metals and surface treatments.
Although thoroughly adaptable and very precise for testing the
softest and hardest of materials, under varying loads, the
Vickers machine is a floor standing unit that is more expensive
than the Brinell or Rockwell machines.
Vickers Hardness Number Calculator
There is now a trend towards reporting Vickers hardness in SI
units (MPa or GPa) particularly in academic papers.
Unfortunately, this can cause confusion. Vickers hardness (e.g.
HV/30) value should normally be expressed as a number only
(without the units kgf/mm2). Rigorous application of
SI is a problem. Most Vickers hardness testing machines use
forces of 1, 2, 5, 10, 30, 50 and 100 kgf and tables for
calculating HV. SI would involve reporting force in newtons
(compare 700 HV/30 to HV/294 N = 6.87 GPa) which is practically
meaningless and messy to engineers and technicians. To convert a
Vickers hardness number the force applied needs converting from
kgf to newtons and the area needs converting form mm2
to m2 to give results in pascals using the formula
above.
To convert HV to MPa multiply by 9.807
To convert HV to GPa multiply by 0.009807
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