Measurement techniques for identifying composition, microstructure, and properties of engineering materials — optical and electron microscopy, x-ray diffraction, EDS and WDS spectroscopy, thermal analysis, mechanical testing, and fractography. Covers when to use which technique, sample-preparation pitfalls, and how to build a characterization plan that answers a specific engineering question rather than accumulating data for its own sake.
Every materials-engineering question eventually becomes a characterization question. "Why did this fail?" becomes "what is on the fracture surface, what is the microstructure underneath, and what is the chemistry of the included phases?" "Will this alloy meet specification?" becomes "what is the grain size, the precipitate distribution, the hardness, and the tensile behavior?" "What is this stuff?" becomes a choice among the two dozen measurement techniques that can answer compositional and structural questions. This skill surveys the core techniques, identifies the question each is best at answering, and warns of the sample-preparation and interpretation mistakes that waste instrument time.
Agent affinity: cottrell (dislocation and microstructure imaging), gordon (failure-surface characterization)
Concept IDs: materials-measurement, materials-microstructure, materials-composition-analysis
A plan is more important than a technique. Instruments are expensive and time-limited; characterization that does not answer a specific question is a waste. The plan has three components.
Characterization reports that cannot be traced back to a question are a sign of drift and should be returned to the plan-writing stage.
Techniques span a huge range of length scales. A working map:
| Length scale | Technique | Question answered |
|---|---|---|
| ~mm and up | Visual, stereo microscopy | Gross features, fracture morphology, corrosion extent |
| 1 to 1000 um | Optical microscopy | Grain size, phase distribution, inclusions, cracks |
| 100 nm to 100 um | SEM (secondary + backscatter) | Surface topography, phase contrast, fractography |
| 10 nm to 10 um | SEM EDS/WDS | Local composition, elemental mapping |
| 0.1 nm to 100 nm | TEM (bright, dark, diffraction) | Dislocations, precipitates, interfaces, phase identification |
| 0.05 nm | HRTEM, atom probe tomography | Atomic structure, composition at single-atom resolution |
| Macroscale (bulk) | XRD, neutron diffraction | Phase fractions, texture, residual stress, lattice parameter |
Match the technique to the feature size. Looking for precipitates smaller than the SEM resolution with an SEM is a waste of time; looking at a millimeter-scale fracture with a TEM is absurd.
The oldest materials characterization technique and still the most cost-effective. Reflected-light optical microscopes with trained operators resolve down to about 0.5 um.
The preparation is usually more important than the microscope. Steps:
A bad mount, a scratched polish, or an over-etched surface produces artifacts that can be mistaken for real microstructure. A good optical metallurgist spends two or three times as much time on preparation as on image acquisition.
Grain size (ASTM E112 linear intercept or equivalent-area methods), phase volume fractions, inclusion rating, surface heat treatment (case depth), macroscale cracks, porosity, and weld structure. Bright-field contrast comes from etching; dark-field, polarized-light, and differential-interference contrast add sensitivity for specific phase combinations.
The SEM raster-scans a focused electron beam across a conductive sample and collects secondary electrons (topography), backscattered electrons (atomic-number contrast), or characteristic x-rays (composition). Resolution depends on the instrument: tungsten-filament SEMs reach ~5 nm, field-emission SEMs reach ~1 nm.
Produces topographic images with a three-dimensional appearance. The standard mode for fractography — surfaces are usually conductive (metals) or made conductive (sputter coating with gold or carbon). Dimples, striations, cleavage facets, and secondary cracks are all visible.
Backscatter yield rises with atomic number. Phases with different mean atomic numbers appear at different brightness — an austenitic region next to a ferritic region is distinguishable without etching. Backscatter is also the mode for electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD), which identifies crystallographic orientation at each pixel and produces grain-orientation maps.
Energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) collects all emitted x-rays simultaneously and sorts by energy. Fast, semi-quantitative, sensitive to about 0.1 weight percent, poor resolution for neighboring elements (overlapping lines). Good first-look tool.
Wavelength-dispersive spectroscopy (WDS) uses crystal diffractometers to resolve individual x-ray lines. Slower, quantitatively accurate to ~0.01 weight percent, separates overlapping lines. The reference tool for precise chemistry.
A typical SEM workflow on a failed part: collect low-magnification secondary-electron images of the fracture surface; zoom in to features of interest; acquire EDS spectra at inclusions, corrosion product, and matrix points; correlate with metallographic cross-sections of the same part.
The TEM passes electrons through a thin (~100 nm) specimen. The transmitted beam is imaged to give structural and compositional information at near-atomic resolution. Modern aberration-corrected TEMs resolve individual atomic columns.
Thin sections are required. Techniques:
Dislocation density and arrangement, precipitate size and identity, grain and subgrain structure at scales below SEM resolution, phase identification via selected-area electron diffraction (SAED), local composition via STEM-EDS. For age-hardened aluminum alloys, TEM is the definitive technique for showing whether the specified precipitate structure is actually present.
A bulk technique that reveals crystal structure, phase composition, texture, and residual stress. A monochromatic x-ray beam is scattered from the sample, and Bragg's law (n*lambda = 2*d*sin(theta)) converts diffraction angles to interplanar spacings. Each crystalline phase produces a fingerprint pattern matchable against reference databases (ICDD, PDF).
Typical uses:
Amorphous samples give broad humps, not sharp peaks — the absence of sharp peaks is itself useful information.
Properties as functions of temperature.
The characteristic trace of each technique on each material family is itself a database — a DSC of a polymer shows glass transition, crystallization, and melting peaks that classify the polymer to within a subfamily.
Controlled destruction to measure properties.
da/dN curves.A characterization report that claims yield strength from hardness alone without a direct tensile test should be treated with suspicion. Correlations are not measurements.