Papers - Measurements of Internal Friction in Age-hardening Alloys with a Modified Torsion Pendulum Apparatus (With Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
R. A. Flinn John T. Norton
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
13
File Size:
816 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1938

Abstract

A considerable number of experiments in recent years have definitely established the fact that the internal friction or mechanical hysteresis of a metal under cyclic stress is a property that is highly "structure sensitive." Because of this fact, it has been suggested that an observation of this property, which often is referred to as "damping capacity,'' might be a useful indicator of structural changes taking place when a metal or alloy is subjected to any of a number of metallurgical treatments. Damping capacity is of interest to both engineer and metallurgist, but from a rather different point of view, and the information that each desires from such observations is of a different nature. The metallurgist is in search of various external indications of changes taking place in the interior of a metal; changes which are in themselves not directly observable. Even if the observed phenomenon cannot be explained in fundamental terms, it may be empirically related to certain characteristics of the material and prove of real value in research. Internal friction or mechanical hysteresis occupies such a position, and, although it is not well understood in terms of basic metallic theory, an observation of its changes can serve in a very useful capacity. Of course, there is nothing new in the measurement of damping, but the use of this property in metallurgical research constitutes a vast field, which has received all too little attention. The present work is essentially of an exploratory nature in this field and is an attempt to evaluate the process as a research tool. The phenomenon of age-hardening was chosen as a typical example of a structural change and one method of measuring damping was examined in considerable detail. Methods of Measuring Damping Capacity Many kinds of observations can be made upon a specimen subjected to a cyclic stress from which can be calculated the energy absorbed in
Citation

APA: R. A. Flinn John T. Norton  (1938)  Papers - Measurements of Internal Friction in Age-hardening Alloys with a Modified Torsion Pendulum Apparatus (With Discussion)

MLA: R. A. Flinn John T. Norton Papers - Measurements of Internal Friction in Age-hardening Alloys with a Modified Torsion Pendulum Apparatus (With Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1938.

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