| Impact energy.
Energy required to fracture a part subjected to shock loading
as in an impact test. Alternate terms are impact value,
impact strength, impact resistance and energy absorption.
Impact resilience.
Measure of the resilience of rubber obtained by dropping
a pendulum hammer against a specimen and measuring rebound.
(ASTM D-1054). It is the ratio of 1 minus the cosine angle
of rebound, to 1 minus the cosine of the original angle
of the pendulum, and is expressed as a %. It is sometimes
called % rebound. Impact resilience of metal is an indication
of hardness obtained in a rebound test such as the test
for scleroscope hardness.
Impact
strength. Energy required to fracture a specimen subjected
to shock loading, as in an impact test. Alternate terms
are impact energy, impact value, impact resistance and energy
absorption. It is an indication of the toughness of a material.
Impact
test. A method for determining behavior of material
subjected to shock loading in bending, tension or torsion.
The quantity usually measured is the energy absorbed in
breaking the specimen in a single blow, as in the Charpy
impact test, Izod impact test and tension impact test. Impact
tests also are performed by subjecting specimens to multiple
blows of increasing intensity, as in the drop ball impact
test and repeated blow impact test. Impact resilience and
scleroscope hardness are determined in nondestructive impact
tests.
Indentation
hardness. Resistance of material to surface penetration
by an indentor. See hardness.
International
rubber hardness degrees (IRHD). Measure of indentation
hardness of rubber. For substantially elastic isotropic
rubbers IRHD is related to Young's modulus by the equation:
F/M = 0.00017 R0.65 Pl.35 where F is indenting force in
kg; M, Young's modulus in kg/sq cm; R, radius of indentor
in cm, and P, penetration in hundredths of mm. IRHD of a
rubber is approximately equal to its durometer hardness.
A standard test method for determining IRHD is given in
ASTM D-1415.
Izod impact test.
Method for determining behavior of materials subjected to
shock loading. Specimen supported as a cantilever beam is
struck by a weight at the end of a pendulum. Impact strength
is determined from the amount of energy required to fracture
specimen. ASTM E-23 describes a standard test procedure,
specimens (including notch shapes) and apparatus for Izod
impact testing of metals. See also ASTM A-327 (cast iron),
ASTM D-256 (plastics) and ASTM D-758 (plastics at sub normal
and elevated temperatures). See also Impact test.
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