Wear Testing Methods: Pin-on-Disc, Abrasion, and Erosion Testing Standards
Wear is the progressive loss of material from a solid surface as a result of mechanical interaction with another surface, particle stream, or fluid. Quantifying wear rate and wear mechanism is essential for selecting alloys and coatings for mining equipment, pump impellers, valve trim, cutting tools, and any surface operating under abrasive or adhesive contact conditions. This article provides a rigorous, standards-referenced treatment of the principal wear testing methodologies — pin-on-disc (ASTM G99), dry-sand rubber wheel (ASTM G65), slurry abrasion (ASTM G75), and solid-particle erosion (ASTM G76) — covering test geometry, specimen preparation, data reduction, and the engineering models that underpin data interpretation.
- Wear testing selects the method matched to the service wear mechanism: pin-on-disc for adhesive/sliding, ASTM G65 for two-body abrasion, ASTM G75 for slurry abrasion, ASTM G76 for solid-particle erosion.
- The Archard equation (V = kWL/H) provides the foundational model linking wear volume to contact load, sliding distance, hardness, and dimensionless wear coefficient k.
- Specific wear rate K = k/H (mm³/N·m) is the preferred material-comparison metric, removing hardness from the normalisation so that different alloy classes can be ranked on a common basis.
- Ductile metals erode maximally at 15–30° impact angle; brittle materials erode maximally at 90° — this distinction drives materials selection for oblique vs. normal impingement conditions.
- Hard microstructure alone does not guarantee abrasion resistance: microstructural type (martensite vs. pearlite), retained austenite content, and carbide morphology critically influence performance at the same bulk hardness.
- All wear test results are geometry- and condition-specific; rank orderings must be validated against field experience before being used as the sole basis for materials selection decisions.
Fundamental Wear Theory and the Archard Model
The Archard adhesive wear equation, derived from the theory of asperity contact and plastic junction formation, provides the quantitative framework for wear coefficient determination. Published by J.F. Archard in 1953 and refined in subsequent work with W. Hirst, the model relates wear volume loss to the operating variables of contact:
Archard Equation:
V = k × W × L / H
where:
V = worn volume (mm³ or m³)
k = dimensionless wear coefficient (unitless, 10⁻⁸ to 10⁻²)
W = normal contact load (N)
L = total sliding distance (m)
H = indentation hardness of softer material (Pa or N/m²)
Rearranged to solve for k:
k = (V × H) / (W × L)
Specific wear rate (K):
K = k / H = V / (W × L) units: mm³/(N·m) or m³/(N·m)
Volume from mass loss:
V (mm³) = [Δm (mg) / ρ (g/cm³)] × 1000 × (1/1000)
= Δm (mg) / ρ (g/cm³) [directly in mm³ when Δm in mg, ρ in g/cm³]
The physical interpretation of k is the probability that any given asperity contact event produces a wear particle. For well-lubricated metal-on-metal contacts, k typically ranges from 10−8 to 10−6. Unlubricated sliding of similar metals produces k in the range 10−4 to 10−2. The specific wear rate K removes hardness from the normalisation, enabling comparison across material classes with fundamentally different deformation mechanisms — for example, comparing polymers (low H but potentially very low K) against hard steels.
Wear Coefficient Classification
| k value (dimensionless) | Wear Severity | Representative Condition | Surface Appearance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10−2 – 10−3 | Severe / catastrophic | Unlubricated similar metals sliding; scuffing contact | Gross material transfer; scoring; seizure risk |
| 10−3 – 10−4 | Moderate / high | Boundary-lubricated steels; contaminated contacts | Ploughing grooves; mild adhesion; oxide debris |
| 10−4 – 10−6 | Mild | EHL-lubricated gears; hardened surfaces in oil | Polished surface; fine oxide debris; running marks |
| <10−6 | Ultra-mild / negligible | Well-designed hydrodynamic bearings; DLC-coated surfaces | Mirror finish maintained; no visible damage |
Pin-on-Disc Testing: ASTM G99
ASTM G99 (Standard Test Method for Wear Testing with a Pin-on-Disk Apparatus) is the most widely used test for quantifying adhesive and sliding wear. A stationary pin specimen contacts the flat face of a rotating disc, generating a circular wear track. By varying load, speed, and environment, the test simulates a wide range of lubricated and dry sliding contacts encountered in bearings, cams, seals, and valve seats.
Test Geometry and Configuration
The pin specimen is typically a 6 mm diameter cylindrical rod with a hemispherical end radius of 3 mm, or a 3 mm diameter ball mounted in a holder. The disc specimen is typically 100 mm diameter and 10 mm thick. The contact position is set at a defined track radius r from the disc centre; the wear track circumference C = 2πr and sliding distance L = C × N (where N = total disc revolutions). ASTM G99 requires reporting: pin material, disc material, normal load W (N), sliding speed v (m/s), track radius (mm), total sliding distance (m), lubricant (or ambient for dry tests), temperature, and relative humidity.
Specimen Preparation Requirements
Surface finish critically affects early-stage wear and the measured coefficient of friction. ASTM G99 specifies that disc and pin surfaces be polished to a consistent Ra and cleaned with solvent (acetone or isopropanol) followed by drying in a desiccator. Initial mass is recorded to ±0.1 mg. Hardness (HV or HRC) is measured before testing. Post-test, specimens are cleaned ultrasonically in solvent, dried, and re-weighed to obtain Δm.
Friction and Wear Data Reduction
The friction force F is measured continuously via a load cell and the coefficient of friction computed as μ = F/W. This allows identification of run-in, steady-state, and transition wear regimes. Wear volumes are computed from mass loss measurements using V = Δm / ρ. The Archard wear coefficient is then calculated per the equation above. Many modern pin-on-disc tribometers also include a linear variable differential transducer (LVDT) to track wear track depth as a function of sliding cycles, enabling real-time wear rate monitoring without interrupting the test.
Key Test Variables and Their Effects
| Variable | Typical Range (ASTM G99) | Effect on Wear |
|---|---|---|
| Normal load W | 0.5 – 200 N | Linear increase in wear rate per Archard model; above critical load, transition to severe wear (scuffing) |
| Sliding speed v | 0.01 – 3 m/s | Higher v increases frictional heating; above transition velocity, oxidative wear film forms, changing mechanism |
| Atmosphere | Dry air, N₂, vacuum, lubricant | Oxygen and moisture strongly affect oxide layer formation and adhesion; dry N₂ typically gives highest k values for metals |
| Counter-body material | Varies (62 HRC steel, Al₂O₃, WC) | Controls whether wear is material-transfer dominated or abrasive; WC counter-body imposes abrasive component absent with softer disc |
| Track radius | 5 – 30 mm | Affects heat flux at contact (higher r → higher v at same rpm); debris entrainment varies |
Dry-Sand Rubber Wheel Abrasion: ASTM G65
ASTM G65 (Standard Test Method for Measuring Abrasion Using the Dry Sand/Rubber Wheel Apparatus) quantifies low-stress two-body abrasion resistance by feeding calibrated dry silica sand (AFS 50–70 grain fineness, 212–300 μm particle size) between a rotating rubber-rimmed wheel and a flat specimen surface. The rubber wheel deforms locally under load, allowing abrasive particles to embed momentarily, cut the specimen surface, and then discharge. This replicates the abrasion mechanism encountered in earth-moving equipment bucket lips, chute liners, and agricultural tillage components.
ASTM G65 Test Procedures
ASTM G65 defines five procedures (A through E) differing in wheel revolutions and applied force:
| Procedure | Force (N) | Revolutions | Sliding Distance (m) | Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | 130 | 6000 | 4,309 | Ranking of materials with moderate to high wear resistance; most common |
| B | 130 | 2000 | 1,436 | Shorter test for initial screening; less statistical confidence |
| C | 130 | 100 | 71.8 | Very short test; thin specimens, coatings, or very soft materials |
| D | 45 | 6000 | 4,309 | Low-stress conditions; softer rubber wheels; fine abrasive simulation |
| E | 45 | 2000 | 1,436 | Reduced duration, low-stress; screening of soft materials |
The wear result is reported as volumetric wear loss (mm³), calculated from mass loss and density. A higher volume loss indicates lower abrasion resistance. For comparative ranking, the reciprocal (normalised resistance relative to a standard calibration block, typically SAE 1020 hot-rolled steel) is sometimes used. A wear number (WN) = reference volume loss / specimen volume loss provides a dimensionless ranking index where WN > 1 indicates better performance than the reference.
Specimen Preparation for ASTM G65
The flat specimen (nominally 76 mm × 25 mm × 13 mm) must be prepared with a ground flat surface (parallel to ±0.025 mm). All faces are cleaned with solvent and the specimen is weighed to ±1 mg before testing. A pre-abraded test of 1000 revolutions (run-in) is performed before the formal measurement period to eliminate surface preparation effects. The rubber wheel hardness (specified as 60 IRHD Shore A) must be verified before each test; worn or hardened rubber wheels give non-conservative results.
Slurry Abrasion: ASTM G75 (Miller Number)
ASTM G75 characterises the abrasivity of slurries and the abrasion resistance of materials in slurry service. Two quantities are defined: the Miller Number (MN), which characterises the slurry (abrasivity), and the SAR Number (Slurry Abrasivity Rating), which characterises the material’s resistance relative to a standard SAR block (17-4 PH stainless steel, 27 HRC).
Test Principle
A flat specimen block reciprocates under a 22 N normal load on a rubber-lined platen submerged in the test slurry. After 2 hours at 48 double strokes per minute (4630 total strokes), mass loss is measured. The Miller Number is derived from the weight loss of the standard SAR block in the test slurry, scaled by a calibration constant. A Miller Number above 100 indicates a highly abrasive slurry (dense mineral tailings, bauxite slurries, coal-water slurries). The SAR Number of a candidate material is its mass loss normalised to the standard block mass loss in the same slurry, with lower SAR Numbers indicating superior slurry abrasion resistance.
Solid-Particle Erosion: ASTM G76
ASTM G76 (Standard Test Method for Conducting Erosion Tests by Solid Particle Impingement Using Gas Jets) quantifies material loss from accelerated solid particle impact. Erodent particles (typically 50 μm aluminum oxide or silica, per AFS 50–70 mesh) are entrained in a compressed gas stream and directed at the specimen surface at defined impact angles. The particle velocity is calibrated using a spinning disc technique. Erosion rate E is defined as:
Erosion rate:
E = Δm_specimen (g) / m_erodent (g)
Specific erosion:
E_s = Δm_specimen (mg) / [ρ_specimen (g/cm³) × m_erodent (g)]
units: mm³/g-erodent
Erosion vs. impact angle (Finnie model for ductile materials):
E(α) ∝ v² × f(α)
f(α) = sin(2α) − β×sin²(α) for α ≤ α_peak
f(α) = cos²(α)/β for α > α_peak
where β = K_material constant; typical α_peak = 20–30° for ductile metals
Impact Angle Dependence
The dependence of erosion rate on impact angle is the most discriminating factor in materials selection for erosion service. Ductile metals — including low-alloy steels, stainless steels, and aluminium alloys — exhibit maximum erosion at 15–30° where the cutting component of particle kinetic energy is maximised. As impact angle approaches 90°, the erosion rate of ductile metals decreases because particle impact becomes primarily compressive, with less cutting efficiency. Conversely, brittle materials such as Al₂O₃ ceramics, WC-Co cermets, and white cast irons show increasing erosion rate toward 90° impact because fracture and spallation dominate over plastic deformation.
This divergence in behaviour has a critical implication for materials selection: in oblique-angle erosion service (cyclones, pipe bends, elbow fittings), ductile alloys with moderate hardness may outperform hard ceramics because the ceramic’s brittle fracture mode is less sensitive to angle. In direct impingement (nozzles, valve seats), ceramics and hard carbides outperform ductile metals.
Comparison of Wear Test Methods
| Standard | Wear Mode Simulated | Specimen Geometry | Key Output | Typical Applications |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ASTM G99 (Pin-on-Disc) | Adhesive / sliding wear | Pin + rotating disc | Wear volume; k (Archard); μ vs. distance curve | Bearings, seals, cam-followers, brake surfaces |
| ASTM G65 (Dry Sand/Rubber Wheel) | Low-stress two-body abrasion | Flat block (76×25×13 mm) | Volume loss (mm³); wear number relative to 1020 steel | Mining liners, chutes, bucket lips, tillage tools |
| ASTM G75 (Miller Slurry) | Slurry abrasion (two-body + corrosion) | Flat block on rubber platen | Miller Number (slurry); SAR Number (material) | Pump impellers, hydrocyclones, slurry pipelines |
| ASTM G76 (Solid Particle Erosion) | Solid particle erosion (impingement) | Flat coupon at defined angle | Specific erosion rate (mg/g-erodent); E vs. angle curve | Turbine blades, fluidised beds, shot peened components |
| ASTM G81 (Jaw Crusher) | High-stress abrasion (crushing) | Specimens replacing jaw plates | Volume loss; ranking vs. reference steel | Crusher liners, grinding mill liners, cone crusher mantles |
| ISO 20808 (Ball-on-Disc) | Thin film / coating wear | Ball on rotating disc with coating | Wear track width/depth; specific wear rate for coating | PVD/CVD coatings, DLC, nitride layers |
Microstructure and Hardness Effects on Wear Resistance
The relationship between microstructure and wear resistance is more nuanced than bulk hardness alone would predict. For two-body abrasive wear (ASTM G65 conditions), hardness is the primary correlating parameter, but the hardness must be measured at the scale of the abrasive contact — nano-indentation hardness of individual phases is often more predictive than bulk Vickers hardness. For ductile steels abraded by silica sand (H ≈ 1000–1200 HV), the critical ratio is Habrasive/Hmaterial:
Abrasive wear regime:
H_a/H_m < 0.8 → mild wear (no grooving of material by abrasive)
0.8 < H_a/H_m < 1.2 → transition regime (mixed cutting and ploughing)
H_a/H_m > 1.2 → hard abrasion regime (severe grooving, rapid material removal)
For silica sand (H_a ≈ 1000–1100 HV):
Steel < 850 HV → hard abrasion regime
WC-Co cermet (H ≈ 1200–1800 HV) → mild or transition regime
Microstructure-Specific Effects
Tempered martensite at 60 HRC typically outperforms coarse pearlite at 58 HRC in ASTM G65 abrasion testing despite similar hardness, because the fine carbide distribution in tempered martensite resists particle embedment and provides more uniform load distribution across the contact. Austenitic manganese steel (Hadfield alloy, 12–14 wt% Mn, as-cast ≈ 180 HV) achieves up to 500–550 HV at the surface in impact-abrasion service through strain-induced martensitic transformation and work hardening — a phenomenon absent in laboratory pin-on-disc tests that involve no impact. This illustrates a fundamental caveat: laboratory wear tests must reproduce the operative mechanism and severity class of the service condition to yield predictively valid rankings.
White cast irons with hypoeutectic compositions (3.0–3.6 wt% C, 1.5–3.0 wt% Cr) rely on a ledeburitic structure comprising M₃C or M₂₃C₃ carbides in a martensitic matrix. The carbide volume fraction (CVF) is the primary microstructural variable governing abrasion resistance: for silica sand service, optimum performance is achieved at CVF 25–35%, beyond which carbide fracture begins to dominate. High-chromium white irons (15–30 wt% Cr) with M₇C₃ carbides (H ≈ 1600–1800 HV) can approach mild-abrasion regime behaviour against silica even at moderate carbide volume fractions because the carbide hardness significantly exceeds the abrasive hardness.
Industrial Applications and Materials Selection
Mining and Mineral Processing
Pump impellers, cyclone bodies, and classifier spirals in mineral processing operate in slurry abrasion conditions best characterised by ASTM G75. The Miller Number of the slurry, combined with the SAR Number of candidate materials, enables service life estimation using empirical wear rate correlations. High-chromium white cast irons (ASTM A532 Class III) are the primary materials for coarse-particle slurry service. Rubber-lined equipment provides competitive performance in fine-particle slurries at moderate Miller Numbers (<50) because rubber’s elastic deformation mode allows it to absorb particle impact energy without material removal — it has a fundamentally different wear mechanism from metal or ceramic lining.
Oil and Gas: Choke Valves and Erosion Control
Choke and control valves in multiphase production service experience solid-particle erosion from sand entrained in production fluids. The erosion rate in choke trim is a function of particle velocity (proportional to v2.0–2.3 per ASTM G76 correlations), particle flux, impact angle, and material erosion resistance. Tungsten carbide-cobalt (WC-10Co) trim provides state-of-the-art erosion resistance for direct impingement conditions (ö90° impact). For trim subject to oblique flow-induced erosion, duplex stainless steels or Stellite 6 overlays may be specified, balancing erosion resistance, corrosion resistance, and machinability requirements.
Automotive: Valve Seat and Cam-Follower Wear
Pin-on-disc tests (ASTM G99) at elevated temperature (up to 800°C) with controlled lubricant supply simulate valve seat wear in internal combustion engines. The transition from mild to severe wear correlates with the breakdown of the tribofilm — primarily a mixed iron oxide/lubricant additive layer. Hardfacing alloys (Stellite 12, Deloro 50, Eatonite series) used on valve seat inserts are routinely characterised using ASTM G99 with engine oil lubrication at operating temperature to establish wear performance rankings before committing to engine test dyno validation.
Quality and Reporting Requirements
Valid wear test data requires complete documentation of all test parameters. ASTM G99 and G65 both specify that the following must be reported: test apparatus type and calibration status, specimen materials (grade, heat treatment, hardness), counter-body material, specimen surface condition (Ra before test), test parameters (load, speed or wheel revolutions, sliding distance, temperature, humidity, lubricant), number of specimens tested (minimum 3 per condition), individual mass loss values, calculated wear volume, and calculated wear coefficient or volumetric wear number. Without this information, wear data cannot be meaningfully reproduced or compared between laboratories. The ASTM G2 committee maintains round-robin data for ASTM G65 reference materials, enabling inter-laboratory qualification of test apparatus.
Related Technical Content
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Archard wear equation and how is the wear coefficient calculated?
The Archard equation is V = k × W × L / H, where V is the worn volume (mm³), W is the normal load (N), L is the sliding distance (m), H is the hardness of the softer material (Pa), and k is the dimensionless wear coefficient. Rearranging: k = V × H / (W × L). Typical k values range from 10−8 (ultra-mild) to 10−2 (severe wear). The specific wear rate K = k/H (mm³/N·m) removes hardness from the comparison so that fundamentally different material classes can be ranked on a single scale.
What is the difference between ASTM G99 and ASTM G65 wear tests?
ASTM G99 (pin-on-disc) measures adhesive and sliding wear under controlled contact between a stationary pin and a rotating disc. The test quantifies wear volume from mass loss at defined loads and sliding distances, and also produces a continuous friction coefficient record. ASTM G65 (dry-sand rubber wheel abrasion) simulates low-stress two-body abrasion using dry silica sand fed between a rubber wheel and a flat specimen surface. G65 produces a volumetric wear loss (mm³) that ranks abrasion resistance across materials. They target different wear mechanisms: G99 for adhesive/two-body sliding; G65 for two-body low-stress abrasion. Neither test replicates impact abrasion or slurry abrasion conditions.
How is wear volume calculated from mass loss measurements?
Wear volume is calculated as V = Δm / ρ, where Δm is the mass loss and ρ is the material density. If Δm is in milligrams and ρ in g/cm³, then V = Δm / ρ directly gives volume in mm³. This conversion is essential when comparing materials with significantly different densities: a dense cobalt-base alloy (ρ ≈ 8.5 g/cm³) will show higher mass loss than a titanium alloy (ρ ≈ 4.5 g/cm³) even if their wear volumes are identical. Always report and compare volumetric wear, not mass loss, when ranking materials of different density.
What are the main wear mechanisms and how do they differ?
The four primary mechanisms are: (1) Adhesive wear — asperities on opposing surfaces weld and shear, transferring material from the softer to the harder body. (2) Abrasive wear — hard particles or hard surface asperities cut or plough grooves into the softer surface; sub-classified as two-body (hard asperity against surface) and three-body (loose hard particles between surfaces). (3) Erosive wear — impingement of solid particles or liquid droplets on the surface removes material primarily by plastic cutting or brittle fracture. (4) Surface fatigue wear — repeated cyclic loading produces sub-surface cracks that propagate to the surface, causing spalling and pitting (delamination wear, rolling contact fatigue). In most industrial situations, two or more mechanisms operate simultaneously; the dominant mechanism must be identified before selecting the appropriate laboratory test method.
What specimen preparation is required before pin-on-disc testing?
Per ASTM G99, the disc surface must be ground and polished to a consistent surface roughness (typically Ra 0.1–0.4 μm) and cleaned ultrasonically in acetone or isopropanol before weighing. The pin specimen is prepared to the specified geometry (typically 6 mm diameter, hemispherical end), also polished and cleaned. Both specimens are dried in a desiccator and weighed to ±0.1 mg. Initial hardness is measured at the test face. Test environment (temperature, relative humidity) is documented. The run-in period (typically 100–500 m of sliding) must be completed before recording steady-state wear data to eliminate surface preparation effects on results.
How does impact angle affect erosion wear rate?
For ductile metals (steels, aluminium alloys), peak erosion occurs at 20–30° impact angles where the cutting component of kinetic energy is greatest. As angle increases toward 90°, erosion decreases because compressive impact becomes less efficient at removing material by cutting. Brittle materials (Al₂O₃ ceramics, WC-Co, white cast iron) show maximum erosion at 90° (normal impingement) because fracture dominates over plastic cutting. The practical consequence: for pipe elbows and cyclone walls (oblique impact angles), ductile materials may outperform harder ceramics. For direct-impingement surfaces (nozzles, valve trim), hard carbides and ceramics are strongly preferred.
What is the ASTM G75 Miller slurry abrasion test and what does it measure?
ASTM G75 quantifies slurry abrasivity and material resistance to slurry abrasion. A flat specimen block reciprocates under 22 N load against a rubber-lined platen submerged in the test slurry. The Miller Number (MN) characterises the abrasivity of the slurry based on mass loss of a standard SAR block (17-4 PH stainless steel, 27 HRC) in that slurry. The SAR Number of a candidate material is its mass loss normalised to the standard block loss in the same slurry — lower SAR Numbers indicate better slurry abrasion resistance. MN below 50 is considered moderately abrasive; MN above 100 indicates highly abrasive slurries such as dense mineral tailings or bauxite slurries at elevated pH.
How does hardness correlate with abrasion wear resistance?
For pure two-body abrasion (ASTM G65 conditions), wear resistance increases with hardness, but the correlation is non-linear and microstructure-dependent. Tempered martensitic steels outperform pearlitic steels at the same bulk hardness due to finer carbide distribution and more homogeneous load sharing. Work-hardening steels such as Hadfield manganese steel can reach 500–550 HV at the wear surface in service through strain-induced transformation, despite starting at around 200 HV, improving performance beyond what as-received hardness would predict. The critical parameter is the hardness ratio Habrasive/Hmaterial: when this exceeds approximately 1.2, the material is in the hard abrasion regime where wear rate is very sensitive to hardness differences. Below a ratio of 0.8, wear is mild regardless of absolute hardness values.
What tribological testing standards are applicable to coatings and surface treatments?
For coatings and surface treatments, key standards include: ASTM G99 (pin-on-disc, applicable to coated specimens with appropriate load calibration to avoid substrate deformation), ISO 20808 (ball-on-disc friction and wear for thin films), ISO 1518 and ASTM G171 (scratch hardness and adhesion of surface layers), and ISO 20502 / ASTM C1624 (scratch testing for adhesion failure load of hard coatings). For hard PVD/CVD coatings (TiN, CrN, DLC), the scratch test is often more informative than bulk wear tests because it evaluates the critical adhesion failure load before coating delamination. Coating thickness (by calotest or SEM cross-section) and substrate hardness must both be documented as context for all coating wear data.
Recommended Reference Books
Disclosure: MetallurgyZone participates in the Amazon Associates programme. If you purchase through these links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps support free technical content on this site.