Establishing a simple and reliable method of measuring ductility of fine metal wire

Abstract Background Measurement of the ductility like elongation and reduction of area of the fine metal wire is important because of the progress for the weight reduction and miniaturization of various products. This study established a simple and reliable method of measuring the ductility of a fin...

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Main Authors: Shiori Gondo, Shinsuke Suzuki, Motoo Asakawa, Kosuke Takemoto, Kenichi Tashima, Satoshi Kajino
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2018-03-01
Series:International Journal of Mechanical and Materials Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40712-018-0091-0
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spelling doaj-5664e503ef0f445194d92259a841df1e2020-11-25T01:16:20ZengSpringerOpenInternational Journal of Mechanical and Materials Engineering1823-03342198-27912018-03-0113111110.1186/s40712-018-0091-0Establishing a simple and reliable method of measuring ductility of fine metal wireShiori Gondo0Shinsuke Suzuki1Motoo Asakawa2Kosuke Takemoto3Kenichi Tashima4Satoshi Kajino5Graduate School of Fundamental Science and Engineering, Department of Applied Mechanics, Waseda UniversityKagami Memorial Research Institute of Materials Science and Technology, Waseda UniversityFaculty of Science and Engineering, Department of Applied Mechanics and Aerospace Engineering, Waseda UniversityFactory Automation Electronics Inc.Factory Automation Electronics Inc.National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and TechnologyAbstract Background Measurement of the ductility like elongation and reduction of area of the fine metal wire is important because of the progress for the weight reduction and miniaturization of various products. This study established a simple and reliable method of measuring the ductility of a fine metal wire. Methods Tensile and loading-unloading tests were performed with applying initial load to high-carbon steel wire (diameters of 0.06–0.296 mm) through capstan-type grippers for non-metal fiber. The wire fastened with the grippers was separated into three parts: the fastened part, the contact part, and the non-contact part. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) images were used to measure the wire radius under uniform deformation and agreed well with the radius calculated using the radius before tensile testing and uniform elongation. Results The following conditions were clarified: non-slippage at the fastening between gripper and wire, a longitudinally uniform elongation, negligible cross-head bending, and the stroke calculation accuracy of elongated length by the initial load. Thus, uniform elongations were calculated as the ratio of the stroke at 0 N subtracted from the stroke at maximum tensile load to the additional initial chuck distance and the stroke at 0 N. The maximum error of uniform elongation was 0.21%. The reduction of area could be calculated by using the radius at uniform deformation portion, while the radius at the most constricted point was measured using SEM image of one fractured piece and uniform elongation. The measurement error of reduction of area was 1.9%. Conclusion This measurement method can be applied to other metal wires less than 1 mm in diameter.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40712-018-0091-0Fine metal wireTensile testingElongationReduction of area
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shiori Gondo
Shinsuke Suzuki
Motoo Asakawa
Kosuke Takemoto
Kenichi Tashima
Satoshi Kajino
spellingShingle Shiori Gondo
Shinsuke Suzuki
Motoo Asakawa
Kosuke Takemoto
Kenichi Tashima
Satoshi Kajino
Establishing a simple and reliable method of measuring ductility of fine metal wire
International Journal of Mechanical and Materials Engineering
Fine metal wire
Tensile testing
Elongation
Reduction of area
author_facet Shiori Gondo
Shinsuke Suzuki
Motoo Asakawa
Kosuke Takemoto
Kenichi Tashima
Satoshi Kajino
author_sort Shiori Gondo
title Establishing a simple and reliable method of measuring ductility of fine metal wire
title_short Establishing a simple and reliable method of measuring ductility of fine metal wire
title_full Establishing a simple and reliable method of measuring ductility of fine metal wire
title_fullStr Establishing a simple and reliable method of measuring ductility of fine metal wire
title_full_unstemmed Establishing a simple and reliable method of measuring ductility of fine metal wire
title_sort establishing a simple and reliable method of measuring ductility of fine metal wire
publisher SpringerOpen
series International Journal of Mechanical and Materials Engineering
issn 1823-0334
2198-2791
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Abstract Background Measurement of the ductility like elongation and reduction of area of the fine metal wire is important because of the progress for the weight reduction and miniaturization of various products. This study established a simple and reliable method of measuring the ductility of a fine metal wire. Methods Tensile and loading-unloading tests were performed with applying initial load to high-carbon steel wire (diameters of 0.06–0.296 mm) through capstan-type grippers for non-metal fiber. The wire fastened with the grippers was separated into three parts: the fastened part, the contact part, and the non-contact part. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) images were used to measure the wire radius under uniform deformation and agreed well with the radius calculated using the radius before tensile testing and uniform elongation. Results The following conditions were clarified: non-slippage at the fastening between gripper and wire, a longitudinally uniform elongation, negligible cross-head bending, and the stroke calculation accuracy of elongated length by the initial load. Thus, uniform elongations were calculated as the ratio of the stroke at 0 N subtracted from the stroke at maximum tensile load to the additional initial chuck distance and the stroke at 0 N. The maximum error of uniform elongation was 0.21%. The reduction of area could be calculated by using the radius at uniform deformation portion, while the radius at the most constricted point was measured using SEM image of one fractured piece and uniform elongation. The measurement error of reduction of area was 1.9%. Conclusion This measurement method can be applied to other metal wires less than 1 mm in diameter.
topic Fine metal wire
Tensile testing
Elongation
Reduction of area
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40712-018-0091-0
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