The use of peening to improve the material properties of metals goes back to ancient times. Gold was hammered to mechanically enhance helmets as far back as 2700 BC and bronze was hammered to strengthen armor in Ancient Greece. In the Middle Ages, hammering was used to strengthen and shape swords. Later applications to improve metal strength include the hammering of artillery gun barrels in the 18th century. Kirkaldy conducted experiments on the tensile strength of wrought-iron and steel and Bauschinger tested the elastic limits of iron and steel during stretching and compression. It was only in the early 20th century that surface treatments of metals began to develop into technical processing methods, with shot peening — effectively a myriad of small hammer blows By 1950, shot peening became an accepted process and was being included in engineering literature. In the same year,
shot peen forming was invented to form the wing skin of the
Super Constellation aircraft. which uses guided rod-shaped indenters to transmit high-frequency impulses to the treated surface. In the early 1970s, peening experienced a further major innovation when researchers such as Allan Clauer at
Battelle labs in
Columbus, Ohio applied high-intensity laser beams onto metal components to achieve deep compressive residual stresses, which they patented as Laser Shock Peening, and became known as
laser peening in the late 1990s, when it was first applied to gas-fired turbine engine fan blades for the U.S. Air Force. == See also ==