Meyer's law
Meyer's law is an empirical relation between the size of a hardness test indentation and the load required to leave the indentation. The formula was devised by Eugene Meyer of the Materials Testing Laboratory at the Imperial School of Technology, Charlottenburg, Germany, circa 1908.
Equation
It takes the form:where
- P is the pressure in megapascals
- k is the resistance of the material to initial penetration
- n is Meyer's index, a measure of the effect of the deformation on the hardness of the material
- d is the chordal diameter
The variables k and n are also dependent on the size of the indenter. Despite this, it has been found that the values can be related using the equation:
Meyer's law is often used to relate hardness values based on the fact that if the weight is quartered, the diameter of the indenter is halved. For instance, the hardness values are the same for a test load of 3000 kgf with a 10 mm indenter and for a test load of 750 kgf with a 5 mm diameter indenter. This relationship isn't perfect, but its percent error is relatively small.
A modified form of this equation was put forth by Onitsch: