In tensile testing, one important parameter evaluated is elongation (extension percentage), which indicates how much a material can stretch before fracture.
During the test, the specimen is pulled under a controlled load using a Universal Testing Machine (UTM). As the load increases, the material begins to deform and its gauge length gradually increases until failure.
📊 Technical Concept
Elongation is calculated by comparing the final length of the specimen after fracture with the original gauge length:
Elongation (%) = [ (Lf - L0) / L0 ] x 100%
Where:
• L₀ – Original gauge length
• Lᶠ – Final length after fracture
A higher elongation percentage indicates that the material is more ductile, meaning it can deform significantly before breaking. Materials with low elongation tend to behave more brittle.
⚙️ Why This Parameter Is Important
• Evaluates material ductility
• Helps determine formability and flexibility
• Assesses structural reliability under tensile load
• Supports material comparison and quality verification
Elongation data, together with tensile strength and yield strength, provides engineers with a clearer understanding of how materials behave under mechanical stress.
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