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Industrial wear expertise: identifying the origin of defects in the laboratory

Understanding the origin of industrial wear in the laboratory

Industrial wear can result in performance losses, production stoppages, non-conformities, or premature failures. When a part shows surface defects, localized corrosion, cracking, scoring, coating adhesion loss, or breakage, it is essential to determine the exact origin of the wear. The challenge is not only to observe the damage, but to reconstruct the mechanism behind it: friction, fatigue, corrosive environment, material defect, unsuitable surface treatment, or external contamination. Wear expertise carried out in the laboratory makes it possible to substantiate the causes and guide corrective actions.

Surface defects and visible degradation

Analysis can reveal surface irregularities, microcracks, scoring, abnormal roughness, friction marks, adhesion loss, localized wear, or coating thickness loss. Studying the surface topography helps characterize the severity of the degradation and verify the compliance of the treatment applied to the part.

Surface, microstructure, and composition analysis

Investigations rely in particular on SEM-EDX to observe morphology and obtain semi-quantitative elemental identification, optical microscopy for metallographic examinations, the hardness tester for Vickers, Brinell, or Rockwell hardness measurements, as well as ICP and elemental analyzers to verify the composition of the metal part. Surface chemistry analysis by XPS can complement the study when the interface or coating is involved.

Obtain a reliable and actionable diagnosis

Using a specialized laboratory makes it possible to go beyond a simple visual assessment. A structured wear expertise provides a well-supported diagnosis of the failure mechanism, the initiation area, aggravating factors, and the compliance of the material or coating. This approach reduces assumptions, facilitates decision-making, and helps define targeted corrective actions on the process, material, or operating conditions.

Analysis methods and technical support

The laboratory uses a multi-technique approach to connect visual, topographical, metallographic, and chemical observations. This approach makes it possible to study the fracture surface, microstructure, hardness, elemental composition, surface condition, and corrosion resistance. Depending on the need, investigations may include observation in a Laboratoire Analyse Meb, examinations in Laboratoire analysis Met, inclusion searches via Analyse Inclusion Laboratoire, or specific compliance checks. The goal is to characterize the phenomenon, locate the point where degradation began, and provide actionable results for production, quality, and R&D.

Fracture, corrosion, and material non-conformity

When a part is broken or corroded, the expertise aims to determine whether the fracture is brittle, ductile, or fatigue-related, to locate the initiation point, and to track propagation. Comparing the sound area with the failed area can reveal differences in hardness, microstructure, or composition. Oxidizing or corrosive agents, as well as external contamination, may also be sought in order to assess the mismatch between the part and its operating environment.

Corrosion testing and service performance verification

For corrosion or material performance issues, electrochemical tests can be carried out: open-circuit potential OCV, corrosion rate LSV, electrochemical impedance EIS, and galvanic coupling studies. Accelerated aging and salt spray tests make it possible to assess resistance under stressed conditions. In some cases, complementary analysis such as XRD or checks against technical standards, for example Laboratoire Analyse Iso 21392, may be relevant.

Secure quality, production, and development

The analysis results are useful for addressing a non-conformity, settling a technical dispute, securing a part before returning it to production, or validating a material choice during the R&D phase. They also make it possible to anticipate corrosion and wear phenomena before industrialization. For companies involved in innovation projects, the support of a Laboratoire Agree Cir can also be part of a development and technical justification approach.

Start an expert assessment approach tailored to your issue

To begin, you should provide the part’s operating context, the loading conditions, the symptoms observed, compliance requirements, and, if possible, a sound reference part. The laboratory then defines a suitable testing strategy: inspection, metallographic sectioning, hardness measurement, chemical analysis, surface characterization, or corrosion testing. This step-by-step approach makes it possible to answer the initial questions quickly and then go deeper if needed.

Frequently asked questions

How can you identify the origin of wear or defects on an industrial part?

To identify the origin of wear or defects on an industrial part, several levels of analysis must be combined: surface observation, topographical study, fracture surface examination, hardness measurement, metallographic analysis, and chemical characterization. This methodology makes it possible to distinguish wear by friction, fatigue failure, corrosion embrittlement, material non-conformity, or a coating issue.

What defects can be highlighted during a wear expertise assessment?

A wear expertise assessment can reveal cracks, scoring, excessive roughness, coating loss, signs of corrosion, fatigue failure, localized embrittlement, metallurgical non-conformity, or the presence of contaminants that promote degradation.

What laboratory techniques are used to determine the origin of wear?

The main techniques used are SEM-EDX, optical microscopy, hardness testing, ICP, elemental analyzers, XPS, XRD, and electrochemical tests. The choice depends on the type of part, the degradation mode observed, and the level of information sought about the surface, the material, or the environment.

Why call on a laboratory for industrial wear expertise?

Using a laboratory makes it possible to obtain an independent, instrumented, multi-scale analysis of the failure. You therefore have reliable technical data to understand the origin of the wear, correct the problem at the source, and limit repeat failures in production.

How do you launch an expert assessment on a worn, corroded, or broken part?

Describe the failure, submit the parts or samples, compare with a compliant part, define the priority analysis, interpret the results, and implement corrective actions.
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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