Abstract
Stable, elevated temperature indentation requires the indenter tip and the sample to be in thermal equilibrium to prevent thermal displacement drift due to thermal expansion. However, temperature feedback on the sample and/or indenter temperatures comes from thermocouples which are not generally located at the contacting surfaces. Thus, a temperature gradient exists between the thermocouple and the contact surfaces. In this work, two procedures for calibrating the surface temperature of the indenter tip via thermocouple indentation and Raman spectroscopy are demonstrated at temperatures between 25°C and 150°C. Good agreement is found between the two methods, and thermal drift is observed to be minimal at the calibrated temperatures. A linear relationship is also demonstrated between measured temperature shifts during contact and heat flow calculated from thermal conductivity, contact area and thermal gradient.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank S. Fahlbusch of Alemnis GmbH, Thun, Switzerland and D. Frey and G. Buerki of EMPA for technical assistance with the In Situ Indenter and S. Hostettler of Synton-MDP AG, Nidau, Switzerland for help with the joint development of the heated indenter tips used in this work and providing samples of freestanding boron doped diamonds for Raman studies.