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14 Key Mechanical Properties of Materials: A Practical Guide

What are Materials Properties?

A material’s property is an intensive property of some material, i.e., a physical property that does not depend on the amount of the material. These quantitative properties may be used as a metric by which the benefits of one material versus another can be compared, thereby aiding in materials selection.

A property may be a constant or maybe a function of one or more independent variables, such as temperature. Materials properties often vary to some degree according to the direction in the material in which they are measured, a condition referred to as anisotropy.

Materials properties that relate to different physical phenomena often behave linearly (or approximately so) in a given operating range. Modeling them as linear functions can significantly simplify the differential constitutive equations that are used to describe the property.

Equations describing relevant material properties are often used to predict the attributes of a system.

The properties are measured by standardized test methods. Many such methods have been documented by their respective user communities and published through the Internet; see ASTM International.

List of Mechanical properties of Materials

A description of some common mechanical and physical properties will provide information that product designers could consider in selecting materials for a given application.

Expanding on those definitions:

1. Conductivity

Thermal conductivity is a measure of the quantity of heat that flows through a material. It is measured as one degree per unit of time, per unit of cross-sectioned area, per unit of length. Materials with low thermal conductivity may be used as insulators, those with high thermal conductivity may be heat sinks. 

Metals that exhibit high thermal conductivity would be candidates for use in applications like heat exchangers or refrigeration. Low thermal conductivity materials may be used in high-temperature applications, but often high-temperature components require high thermal conductivity, so it is important to understand the environment.

Electrical conductivity is similar, measuring the quantity of electricity that is transferred through a material of known cross-section and length.

2. Corrosion Resistance

Corrosion resistance describes a material’s ability to prevent natural chemical or electrochemical attack by the atmosphere, moisture, or other agents. Corrosion takes many forms including pitting, galvanic reaction, stress corrosion, parting, inter-granular, and others (many of which will be discussed in other newsletter editions).

Corrosion resistance may be expressed as the maximum depth in mils to which corrosion would penetrate in one year; it is based on a linear extrapolation of penetration occurring during the lifetime of a given test or service.

Some materials are intrinsically corrosion-resistant, while others benefit from the addition of plating or coatings.  Many metals that belong to families that resist corrosion are not totally safe from it, and are still subject to the specific environmental conditions where they operate.

3. Density

Density, often expressed as pounds per cubic inch, or grams per cubic centimeter, etc., describes the mass of the alloy per unit volume. The density of the alloy will determine how much a component of a certain size will weigh.

This factor is important in applications like aerospace or automotive where weight is important. Engineers looking for lower weight components may seek alloys that are less dense but must then consider the strength to weight ratio. 

A higher density material like steel might be chosen, for example, if it provides higher strength than a lower density material.  Such a part could be made thinner so that less material could help compensate for the higher density.

4. Ductility/Malleability

Ductility is the ability of a material to deform plastically (that is, stretch) without fracturing and retains the new shape when the load is removed. Think of it as the ability to stretch a given metal into a wire.

Ductility is often measured using a tensile test as a percentage of elongation, or the reduction in the cross-sectional area of the sample before failure. A tensile test can also be used to determine Young’s Modulus or modulus of elasticity, an important stress/strain ratio used in many design calculations.

The tendency of a material to resist cracking or breaking under stress makes ductile materials appropriate for other metalworking processes including rolling or drawing.  Certain other processes like cold-working tend to make a metal less ductile.

Malleability, a physical property, describes a metal’s ability to be formed without breaking. Pressure, or compressive stress, is used to press or roll the material into thinner sheets. A material with high malleability will be able to withstand higher pressure without breaking.

5. Elasticity, Stiffness

Elasticity describes a material’s tendency to return to its original size and shape when a distorting force is removed. As opposed to materials that exhibit plasticity (where the change in shape is not reversible), an elastic material will return to its previous configuration when the stress is removed.

The stiffness of a metal is often measured by the Young’s Modulus, which compares the relationship between stress (the force applied) and strain (the resulting deformation). The higher the Modulus – meaning greater stress results in proportionally lesser deformation the stiffer the material.

The glass would be an example of a stiff/high Modulus material, where rubber would be a material that exhibits low stiffness/low Modulus. This is an important design consideration for applications where stiffness is required under load.

6. Fracture Toughness

Impact resistance is a measure of a material’s ability to withstand a shock. The effect of impact on a collision that occurs in a short period of time is typically greater than the effect of a weaker force delivered over a longer period. 

So, a consideration of impact resistance should be included when the application includes an elevated risk of impact. Certain metals may perform acceptably under static load but fail under dynamic loads or when subjected to a collision. In the lab, the impact is often measured through a common Charpy test, where a weighted pendulum strikes a sample opposite of machined V-notch.

7. Hardness

Hardness is defined as a material’s ability to resist permanent indentation (that is plastic deformation). Typically, the harder the material, the better it resists wear or deformation. The term hardness, thus, also refers to the local surface stiffness of a material or its resistance to scratching, abrasion, or cutting. 

Hardness is measured by employing such methods as Brinell, Rockwell, and Vickers, which measure the depth and area of depression by a harder material, including a steel ball, diamond, or another indenter.

8. Plasticity

Plasticity, the converse of elasticity, describes the tendency of a certain solid material to hold its new shape when subjected to forming forces. It is the quality that allows materials to be bent or worked into a permanent new shape. Materials transition from elastic behavior to plastic at the yield point.

9. Strength – Fatigue

Fatigue can lead to fracture under repeated or fluctuating stresses (for example loading or unloading) that have a maximum value less than the tensile strength of the material. Higher stresses will accelerate the time to failure, and vice versa, so there is a relationship between the stress and cycles to failure. 

Fatigue limit, then, refers to the maximum stress the metal can withstand (the variable) in a given number of cycles.

Conversely, the fatigue life measure holds the load fixed and measures how many load cycles the material can withstand before failure. Fatigue strength is an important consideration when designing components subjected to repetitive load conditions.

10. Strength – Shear

Shear strength is a consideration in applications like bolts or beams where the direction, as well as the magnitude of the stress, is important. Shear occurs when directional forces cause the internal structure of the metal to slide against itself, at the granular level.

11. Strength – Tensile

One of the most common metal property measures is Tensile, or Ultimate, Strength. Tensile strength refers to the amount of load a section of metal can withstand before it breaks. In lab testing, the metal will elongate but return to its original shape through the area of elastic deformation.

When it reaches the point of permanent or plastic deformation (measured as Yield), it retains the elongated shape even when the load is removed. At the Tensile point, the load causes the metal to ultimately fracture.

This measure helps differentiate between materials that are brittle from those that are more ductile. Tensile or ultimate tensile strength is measured in Newtons per square millimeter (Mega Pascals or MPa) or pounds per square inch.

12. Strength – Yield

Similar in concept and measure to Tensile Strength, Yield Strength describes the point after which the material under load will no longer return to its original position or shape. Deformation moves from elastic to plastic. 

Design calculations include the Yield Point to understand the limits of dimensional integrity under load.  Like Tensile strength, Yield strength is measured in Newtons per square millimeter (Mega Pascals or MPa) or pounds per square inch.

13. Toughness

Measured using the Charpy impact test similar to Impact Resistance, toughness represents a material’s ability to absorb impact without fracturing at a given temperature. Since impact resistance is often lower at low temperatures, materials may become more brittle.

Charpy values are commonly prescribed in ferrous alloys where the possibilities of low temperatures exist in the application (e.g., offshore oil platforms, oil pipelines, etc.) or where instantaneous loading is a consideration (e.g. ballistic containment in military or aircraft applications).

14. Wear Resistance

Wear resistance is a measure of a material’s ability to withstand the effect of two materials rubbing against each other. This can take many forms including adhesion, abrasion, scratching, gouging, galling, and others.

When the materials are of different hardness, the softer metal can begin to show the effects first, and management of that may be part of the design. Even rolling can cause abrasion because of the presence of foreign materials. Wear resistance may be measured as the amount of mass loss for a given number of abrasion cycles at a given load.

Other Mechanical properties

Acoustical properties

Atomic properties

Chemical properties

Electrical properties

Magnetic properties

Manufacturing properties

Optical properties

Radiological properties

Thermal properties

FAQ

What are the 7 properties of materials?

Physical properties of materials:

What are the properties of materials explain with examples?

Physical properties refer to properties that can be observed or measured without changing the composition of the material. Examples include color, hardness and smell and freezing, melting and boiling points. Chemical properties are discovered by observing chemical reactions.

What are the three properties of materials?

The four properties of material are mass, toughness, hardness and malleability. Materials occurs in nature according to their compactness. Material is categorized into three common states in which they are present, they are solid liquid and gas.

What are the 10 properties of materials?

A description of some common mechanical and physical properties will provide information that product designers could consider in selecting materials for a given application.

What are the 4 types of materials?

Materials are generally split into four main groups: metals, polymers, ceramics, and composites.

What property is common among all the materials?

Common mechanical properties that are considered in a wide array of materials are stiffness, toughness, strength, ductility, hardness, and impact resistance. The mechanical properties of materials are not constant; they continuously change when exposed to various conditions, such as heat or loading rate.

What are the two major properties of materials?

The important properties of material are:

What is a property in terms of materials?

In science, a property is anything that describes a material or substance. It is a characteristic of that material. For example, how hard the material is, its color, or its shape. Elasticity is a property of rubber; in other words: rubber is elastic.

What are materials classify it write any two properties of materials?

Material is the matter, an object is made up of. It is a relatively broad term to be defined. They are classified based upon their properties. They have properties like hardness, strength, stiffness, thermal conductivity, heat capacity, permeability, and magnetism, etc.

What are five properties of metal materials?

Metals are lustrous, malleable, ductile, good conductors of heat and electricity.

What is structural properties of materials?

Structural materials are those that bear load. The key properties of materials in relation to bearing load are: elastic modulus, yield strength, ultimate tensile strength, hardness, ductility, fracture toughness, fatigue, and creep resistance.

What do I know about materials?

Material is a substance or mixture of substances that constitutes an object. Materials can be pure or impure, living or non-living matter. Materials can be classified based on their physical and chemical properties, or on their geological origin or biological function.

How are the properties of materials related to their uses?

That there is a difference between an object and the material(s) it is made from. That different materials have different properties. That the properties of a material determine its suitability for a particular use. The definitions of key properties, e.g. absorbency and flexibility.

What are the properties of sorting materials into groups?

Objects are grouped on the basis of properties like lustre, hard/softness, transparency, solubility, floatation, attraction towards magnet, conduction of heat and conduction of electricity. Materials can be grouped as lustrous and non-lustrous on the basis of lustre/shine possessed by them.

What are the five properties on the basic which we classify material?

The five properties on the basis of which we can classify materials are:

How do you classify the materials on the basis of their properties?

Solid materials have been conveniently grouped into three basic classifications: metals, ceramics, and polymers. This scheme is based primarily on chemical makeup and atomic structure, and most materials fall into one distinct grouping or another, although there are some intermediates.

What are functional properties of materials?

Functional materials are those which possess desirable electronic, magnetic, optical and piezoelectric properties for applications such as energy harvesting and storage, as well as memory and communication devices.

What are the properties of objects?

The basic properties of an object are those items identified by its four-part name (name, type, instance, and version) and also include owner, status, platform, and release.

How do you explain materials to a child?

A material is any substance that has a name. For example: chalk, paper, wood, iron, air, water, clay, plastic, rubber, stone, leather, wax. Everything is made up of materials. When we want to make something we need to choose the best material for the job.

What are materials classify it Class 6?

Wood and paper are non-lustrous materials. Glass and iron are lustrous materials. Glass is transparent, paper is translucent and wood and iron are opaque materials. Wood and iron are hard materials and paper and glass are soft materials.

What properties of a material has an ability to conduct electricity?

Metals are generally very good conductors, meaning they let current flow easily. Materials that do not let current flow easily are called insulators. Most nonmetal materials such as plastic, wood and rubber are insulators.

What is the function of material?

It is as important as manufacturing, engineering and finance. The supply of proper quality of materials is essential for manufacturing standard products. The avoidance of material wastage helps in controlling cost of production. Material management is essential for every type of concern.


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