Point Load Testing Of Brittle Materials To Determine Tensile Strength And Relative Brittleness

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 27
- File Size:
- 863 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1968
Abstract
Most brittle solids are relatively weak in tension and this weakness can be very significant in determining their performance in structures and excavations. Consequently, accurate knowledge of the tensile strength of brittle materials has long been recognized as important. In the past, measurements of the tensile strength of materials such as concrete, ceramics, and particularly rock have been hindered by problems encountered in fabricating test specimens and in accurately loading them. These difficulties have resulted in a scarcity of published tensile strength data. This can be readily seen in tabulations such as Wuerker's "Annotated Tables of Strength and Elastic Properties of Rocks."1 There are now three distinct approaches being used to determine the tensile strength of brittle materials. These are shown schematically in Fig. 1. The first method consists of simply pulling the specimen apart by applying an axial load. Although this procedure is the easiest to understand, the technical problems encountered during testing are numerous. Specimens cannot be readily fabricated into dumbbell-shaped specimen* like those customarily used for testing inetals. Cylindrical specimens cannot be loaded in jaw-clamps because adverse stress conditions arise at the clamping points, which causes unreliable results. An innovation developed by Niles Grosvenor at the Colorado School of Mines, in which the load is applied through steel-end caps glued to the ends of the specimens, has considerable merit, hut the samples are costly to prepare.2 All tests using a direct pull are further handicapped by the possibility of small amounts of bending being present, the specimen's surface condition, and
Citation
APA:
(1968) Point Load Testing Of Brittle Materials To Determine Tensile Strength And Relative BrittlenessMLA: Point Load Testing Of Brittle Materials To Determine Tensile Strength And Relative Brittleness. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1968.