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  2. Knoop hardness test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knoop_hardness_test

    A pyramidal diamond point is pressed into the polished surface of the test material with a known (often 100 g) load, for a specified dwell time, and the resulting indentation is measured using a microscope. The geometry of this indenter is an extended pyramid with the length to width ratio being 7:1 and respective face angles are 172 degrees ...

  3. Scratch hardness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scratch_hardness

    Scratch hardness test or scratch test refers to any of a number of methods of measuring scratch hardness. Resistance to abrasion is less affected by surface variations than indentation methods. Scratch hardness is measured with a sclerometer. [1] Attempting to scratch a surface to test a material is a very old technique. [2]

  4. Mohs scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohs_scale

    Diamond (Mohs 10) is 1500 (off scale). Diamond was the hardest known naturally occurring mineral when the scale was designed, and defines the top of the scale, arbitrarily set at 10. The hardness of a material is measured against the scale by finding the hardest material that the given material can scratch, or the softest material that can ...

  5. Friedrich Mohs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Mohs

    They knew that diamond could scratch quartz, so showing it to be harder. This became the basis of the hardness scale developed by Mohs. The hardest mineral, diamond, was given a value of 10 and softer minerals such as talc were given the value of 1. Other minerals were given values intermediate, depending on their ability to scratch another ...

  6. Hardness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardness

    The principle is that an object made of a harder material will scratch an object made of a softer material. When testing coatings, scratch hardness refers to the force necessary to cut through the film to the substrate. The most common test is Mohs scale, which is used in mineralogy. One tool to make this measurement is the sclerometer.

  7. Abrasion (mechanical) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abrasion_(mechanical)

    ASTM G105 Standard Test Method for Conducting Wet Sand/Rubber Wheel Abrasion Tests [21] ASTM G132 Standard Test Method for Pin Abrasion Testing [22] ASTM G171 Standard Test Method for Scratch Hardness of Materials Using a Diamond Stylus [23] ASTM G174 Standard Test Method for Measuring Abrasion Resistance of Materials by Abrasive Loop Contact [24]

  8. FBI testing DNA after woman says she was child who ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/fbi-testing-dna-woman-says-194840918...

    The FBI are investigating the claims of a woman in Texas who says she is Diamond Bradley - a young girl who disappeared from her Chicago home more than 20 years ago in what became one of the city ...

  9. Superhard material - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superhard_material

    The short B-N (1.57 Å) bond is close to the diamond C-C bond length (1.54 Å), that results in strong covalent bonding between atoms in the same fashion as in diamond. The slight decrease in covalency for B-N bonds compared to C-C bonds reduces the hardness from ~100 GPa for diamond down to 48 GPa in c-BN.