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Hardness analysis: identifying the origin of a material defect in the laboratory

Quickly identify the origin of a material defect through hardness analysis

A hardness discrepancy can reveal a heat treatment anomaly, material heterogeneity, a weakened area, or a local transformation of the material. In the context of a failure-oriented hardness analysis, the laboratory compares sound areas and failed areas in order to highlight mechanical variations that may explain cracking, breakage, abnormal wear or loss of performance. This approach is particularly relevant for investigating a material defect on a metal part, coating or assembly subjected to service loads.

Mechanical failures, breakages and weakened areas

Hardness measurement is used to investigate brittle, ductile or fatigue failures, cracks, wear areas, deviations after heat treatment, and heterogeneities between the core and the surface. In practice, the laboratory carries out targeted comparisons between failed areas and reference areas to determine whether the observed hardness level is consistent with the intended use of the part. This approach usefully complements microscopic observation and failure analysis, notably through our SEM Analysis Laboratory.

Mechanical measurements and microstructural observations

Hardness is measured with a hardness tester, then interpreted alongside observations under an optical microscope and, if necessary, fractographic analysis. The goal is to link the measured value to the material’s actual metallurgical state: grain size, structure, gradients between surface and core, heat-affected zones or local transformations. This cross-reading makes it possible to more precisely qualify the origin of the material defect and avoid drawing conclusions based on a single measurement.

A root-cause-oriented approach for industrial decision-making

The laboratory supports manufacturers in understanding failures by combining hardness analysis, materials expertise and application-based interpretation. The goal is not only to measure, but to explain: compare critical areas, link the results to the manufacturing process, verify compliance with customer specifications and provide actionable information for technical decision-making, issue resolution or corrective action.

Laboratory expertise to link hardness, microstructure and failure mechanism

Interpreting a hardness measurement is not limited to a numerical value. It is part of a broader defect analysis approach combining fractographic examination, metallographic observation, chemical composition testing and surface characterization. Cross-referencing the results makes it possible to identify whether the origin of the material defect comes from an out-of-spec grade, an unsuitable treatment, corrosion, an inclusion, a surface defect or service loading. For additional investigations, discover our Material Laboratory Expertise.

Corrosion, surface defects and material non-conformities

A local variation in hardness may also be associated with corrosion, coating degradation, adhesion defects, particulate contamination or an inclusion. The laboratory can then combine hardness measurement with chemical and morphological analysis to verify the grade, confirm the nature of a surface treatment or characterize an internal defect. For the study of particles and internal heterogeneities, also see our page Inclusion Analysis Laboratory.

Chemical analysis and surface characterization

Depending on the case, the laboratory supplements the investigation with SEM-EDX, ICP, elemental analysis C/S, N/O, H, as well as surface techniques such as XPS, TOF-SIMS, AFM or roughness measurement. These methods make it possible to verify composition, identify oxidizing or corrosive agents, confirm the chemical nature of a surface treatment and assess coating uniformity. For a broader view of the investigative tools available, also consult Met Laboratory.

Integrated analytical capabilities and a recognized quality framework

For industrial clients, the advantage lies in having complementary equipment on a single site: hardness tester, optical microscope, SEM-EDX, ICP-AES, XPS, TOF-SIMS, AFM and elemental analysis. The laboratory also provides support for R&D, process optimization, method development and training. It operates within a recognized quality framework, with COFRAC accreditation according to the available scope and recognition under the research tax credit scheme. Learn more about our Approved CIR Laboratory.

Define the need, submit the samples, leverage the results

To start a defect analysis, it is necessary to define the context in which the defect appeared, the part’s function, the presumed material, service conditions, and the areas to compare. The laboratory can then propose a suitable analysis plan combining hardness, microstructure, composition, fractography, and surface examination. The deliverables aim to identify the origin of the material defect and guide corrective actions. To move forward with your case: send your parts, describe the nonconformity, compare the critical areas, confirm the material grade, verify the treatment, interpret the results, and secure your production.

Frequently asked questions

How can a hardness analysis help identify the origin of a material defect?

Hardness analysis makes it possible to identify the origin of a material defect by comparing the local mechanical behavior of different areas of the part. Excessive hardness may point to embrittlement or over-heat treatment, while low hardness may reveal insufficient treatment, decarburization, wear or material non-conformity. Correlated with microstructure, composition and fracture appearance, hardness measurement becomes a reliable indicator for tracing the root cause of a failure.

What industrial defects can be investigated through hardness analysis?

This approach makes it possible to investigate breakages, cracks, wear, heat treatment defects, localized corrosion, coating defects, material heterogeneities and metallurgical non-conformities. It is particularly useful when the defect is localized and the aim is to distinguish a material-related cause from a process-related cause or service loading.

Which techniques are used to make hardness result interpretation more reliable?

Hardness results are made more reliable by cross-checking them with microstructure, fractography, chemical composition and surface condition. This multi-technique approach makes it possible to distinguish a defect linked to the material, the treatment, the coating, corrosion or the part’s operating conditions.

Why entrust a material defect hardness analysis to the Filab laboratory?

Choosing Filab means benefiting from a root-cause-focused investigation, supported by complementary analytical methods and expert interpretation of material failures. This combination makes it possible to obtain technically substantiated conclusions that are directly useful for securing a product, a process, or a supplier.

How do you launch a laboratory investigation into a material defect through hardness analysis?

Launching an investigation relies on sending the samples and the useful technical information: defect context, process history, specifications, and expectations. Based on these elements, the laboratory builds a tailored testing strategy to identify the likely cause of the defect and provide results that can be used by your quality, methods, or R&D teams.
The filab advantages
A highly qualified team
A highly qualified team
Responsiveness in responding to and processing requests
Responsiveness in responding to and processing requests
A COFRAC ISO 17025 accredited laboratory
A COFRAC ISO 17025 accredited laboratory
(Staves available on www.cofrac.com - Accreditation number: 1-1793)
A complete analytical facility of 5,200m²
A complete analytical facility of 5,200m²
Tailor-made support
Tailor-made support
Video debriefing available with the expert
Video debriefing available with the expert
Thomas GAUTIER Head of Materials Department
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