Room Temperature Test Method generally refers to a set of standard operating procedures for testing material properties under normal laboratory ambient temperature. In materials science and engineering (especially metallic materials), when we mention “room temperature test”, in most cases it specifically refers to the tensile test conducted in accordance with GB/T 228.1-2010 Metallic materials — Tensile testing — Part 1: Method of test at room temperature. The following is a detailed interpretation of the room temperature test method:
1. What is “Room Temperature”? (Definition)
In standards, “room temperature” is not a fixed value but a specified range.
- Standard range: Generally refers to 10°C to 35°C.
- Arbitration temperature: If there is a dispute over test results (e.g., litigation between buyers and sellers), testing shall be performed at 23°C ± 5°C.
- Special cases: For materials whose properties are highly temperature-sensitive (such as certain plastics or precision alloys), standards may specify a narrower temperature range.
2. Core Content of the Room Temperature Test Method (Taking Tensile Test as an Example)
GB/T 228.1-2010 is the fundamental standard for tensile testing of metallic materials in China, which specifies all details for conducting tensile tests at room temperature.
A. Specimen Requirements
- Shape: Defines dimensions for proportional specimens (e.g., round bars with 10 mm diameter) and non-proportional specimens.
- Machining: Strict regulations on surface roughness, parallel length and transition radii of specimens to prevent test results from being affected by machining defects.
B. Test Equipment
- Testing machine: Must be a universal material testing machine that has passed metrological verification.
- Measurement system:
- Force measurement: Accuracy must be Class 1 or better.
- Extensometer: An instrument used to measure small elongations of specimens, critical for determining yield strength.
C. Test Speed
This is the most easily overlooked yet critical parameter in room temperature testing. Tensile speed directly affects the measured yield strength.
- Elastic stage: Relatively high speed.
- Yield stage: Speed must be reduced to accurately capture the yield point (the serrated fluctuation).
- Strain-hardening stage: Speed can be appropriately increased.
D. Post-Fracture Measurement
After the specimen fractures, the two parts are fitted together to measure the fractured gauge length (Lu) and calculate elongation (A).The minimum diameter at the fracture is measured to calculate reduction of area (Z).
3. Importance of the Room Temperature Test Method
Why does the pressure vessel industry attach great importance to room temperature testing?
- Design basis: The allowable stress values used by engineers to design pressure vessel wall thickness are mainly calculated based on yield strength and tensile strength at room temperature.
- Quality control: Steel mills must perform room temperature tensile tests on each heat batch; steel plates can only be delivered if the data meets specified standard values.
- Comparability: Test data from different laboratories and manufacturers are comparable only under a unified “room temperature” standard.