indenter of a Vickers hardness tester It was decided that the indenter shape should be capable of producing geometrically similar impressions, irrespective of size; the impression should have well-defined points of measurement; and the indenter should have high resistance to self-deformation. A
diamond in the form of a square-based pyramid satisfied these conditions. It had been established that the ideal size of a
Brinell impression was of the ball diameter. As two tangents to the circle at the ends of a chord 3
d/8 long intersect at 136°, it was decided to use this as the included angle between plane faces of the indenter tip. This gives an angle from each face
normal to the horizontal plane normal of 22° on each side. The angle was varied experimentally and it was found that the hardness value obtained on a homogeneous piece of material remained constant, irrespective of load. Accordingly, loads of various magnitudes are applied to a flat surface, depending on the hardness of the material to be measured. The HV number is then determined by the ratio
F/
A, where
F is the force applied to the diamond in kilograms-force and
A is the surface area of the resulting indentation in square millimeters. : A = \frac{d^2}{2 \sin(136^\circ/2)}, which can be approximated by evaluating the sine term to give, : A \approx \frac{d^2}{1.8544}, where
d is the average length of the diagonal left by the indenter in millimeters. Hence, : \mathrm{HV} = \frac{F}{A} \approx \frac{1.8544 F}{d^2} \quad [\textrm{kgf/mm}^2], where
F is in
kgf and
d is in millimeters. The corresponding unit of HV is then the kilogram-force per square millimeter (kgf/mm2) or HV number. In the above equation,
F could be in N and
d in mm, giving HV in the SI unit of MPa. To calculate Vickers hardness number (VHN) in
kilogram-force using SI units for the input parameters, one needs to convert the force applied from N to kilogram-force by dividing by 9.806 65 (
standard gravity). This leads to the following equation: : \mathrm{HV} \approx {0.1891}\frac{F}{d^2} \quad [\textrm{kgf/mm}^2], where
F is in Newtons and
d is in millimeters. Vickers hardness numbers are reported as
xxxHVyy, e.g.
440HV30, or '''''' if duration of force differs from 10 s to 15 s, e.g. 440HV30/20, where: •
440 is the hardness number, •
HV names the hardness scale (Vickers), •
30 indicates the load used in kgf. •
20 indicates the loading time if it differs from 10 s to 15 s ==Precautions==