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12.2.4 Sharpness |
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Defining and Measuring Sharpness |
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Your sword or knife that's just lying there is either sharp or blunt. So sharpness
is a static property. Well, yes, but there are properties closely related to sharpness
that are more dynamic:
- Retaining (or loosing) sharpness while using the blade.
- Reconstituting sharpness after it was lost.
And now I have opened a rather large can of exceedingly squiggly worms! Let me make one thing very clear right away: |
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No, I don't have that easy fail-proof
recipe for keeping your blades sharp
I have enough trouble to keep my
own blades (medium) sharp |
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All I can give you is a little "theory" of sharpness and retaining
same. But that is not overly helpful for sharpening a blade. It is a bit like playing the piano (or any other musical instruments):
Knowing all about the theory of musical notation and how that transfers into hitting the right key the right way at the
right time, will not a piano player make. And the top players (who do certainly know the theory) don't know exactly why
they are somewhat better at it then the second (still very good) tier of players. Some top experts can sharpen your
sword better than "normal" experts but nobody knows what, exactly, they do differently. That's why sharpening
a blade by hand is still an art. Sharpening blades by machines is different. The razor blades you buy are all extremely
sharp (even so there are some differences between brands) and come straight from a machine. |
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For reasons not all that clear to me, the concept of sharpness did not receive
much scientific attention until quite recently. References 1 and 2 (freely available in
the Net) give examples of recent papers dedicated to the subject; their literature lists will lead you on if you like scientific
fights and heavy math. What I learned from perusing some more publications is that there is no general agreement on how
to define and measure sharpness. Greatly simplified, two basic ways of defining the sharpness of a given blade by a number are pursued:
- Sharpness relates to the geometry of the blade, in the most simple case it relates to the inverse of the
radius of curvature of the edge.
- Sharpness relates to the performance of the blade, e.g. how deep it cuts into a
standard substrate for a given force pushing it down.
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The picture below gives an idea of how one could relate sharpness to the radius of curvature of a blade: |
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Sharpness demands a small radius of curvature at the blade edge |
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Sharpness sort of begins at a radius of curvature of a few micrometers (µm). If you
want "razor-sharp", you need to do better: A radius of 0.01 µm (=10 nm) is a good
number then. The limit, of course, is the size of an atom (imagine the circle in the picture to be an atom), giving a radius
of about 0.0001 µm or 0.1 nm. That would be a more than 10.000 fold improvement on sharpness
relative to a 1 µm radius. I'm not sure if anybody has made a length of blade "atomically" sharp. But
one-atom tips are common goods in "scanning
tunneling microscopy" or STM. |
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But is it only the radius of curvature that
determines sharpness? Of course not, consider the next two pictures: |
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Blades with identical radius of curvature but different shapes |
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| Ideal and real edge |
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Not much needs to be said. The upper picture shows blades with the same radius
of curvature but different blade geometries, Would they all be of identical perceived
sharpness? Probably not - but it always depends of what you have in mind. Cutting hairs close to the skin without cutting
the flesh certainly would profit from an optimized blade geometry like the one on the left. A meat cleaver wouldn't do so
well with this shape, though. A more severe problem, however, results from the fact that most likely the geometry changes as you move along the blade. The radius of curvatures will not be the same at every point,
the edge is not perfectly straight, and so on. My drawing skills cannot do justice to that but you get the idea. Irregularities
along the blade are probably not so good for cutting straight into something by only pressing the blade down but might give
better results compared to the "ideal" blade if you start "sawing". Saws do not have teeth just for looks, after all.
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To conclude:
- The (average) radius of curvature of your blade is not a unique and precise
measure of the sharpness of your blade. But the trend is clear: A smaller radius of curvature will tend to increase the
sharpness.
- The (average) radius of curvature of your blade is not a convenient indication for
the sharpness because it is difficult to measure. Cut your blade and look at the cross-section in a light
microscope? Won't work, you need far higher resolution than what a light microscope has to offer. You need a (scanning) electron microscope! Sharpness is nanoscience!
- Getting numbers for the radius of curvature thus is possible but not convenient.
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Indeed, if you look for high-magnification pictures of blade cross-sections
in the Net, you won't find many, if any - as long as you do not hit on the pages of "scienceofsharp". This site features many excellent pictures that were taken in a "scanning electron microscope" (SEM); here are a few: |
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Rather good edge (left), and a somewhat crumbly one (right) |
Source (for all SEM pictures here): from the scienceofsharp web page Whoever you are (the site doesn't reveal the maker), thanks a lot for sharing!
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| About as sharp as it can get |
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It's not easy to obtain an edge like that! Don't ask me how to do it! Consult
the page I mentioned. |
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Retaining Sharpness |
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It's difficult to produce a sharp edge but it is impossible to retain a sharp
edge if you use your blade frequently. What causes an edge to blunt, and how does that happen in detail? Rather tough questions,
in particular the second one. If you want answers to the detailed mechanisms of blunting, you need to look at the blunted
blade with a high-powered electron microscope once more. That's not for everybody to do, and if you want pictures I must
refer you to the the scienceofsharp site
once more. Or even better, the article of our old acquaintance, John D. Verhoeven
3) who has written an extensive
article with many (SEM) pictures about the subject. |
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The first question is easier to tackle - at least up to a point. All of us know
one sure way of blunting a blade: Use it on something harder than the edge of the blade. Hit a decent stone with most blades
and they are now definitely dull - if not fractured, dent and bend |
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What happens is quite simple in principle. During impact (slow or fast) stress
builds up on the blade edge and on the regions of the target that is hit by the edge. Hardness essentially measures the
stress needed to induce plastic deformation (the yield stress) or, more loosely speaking, the onset of local cracking, and
the softer material will "give" first, deforming in some way and thus blunting itself. Here
are a few pictures showing what could happen: |
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Razor edge dulled by pulling it "sideways" over glass |
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No surprise here. We just bend the edge by plastic deformation. This can be reversed
to some extent by "stropping" because the sharp edge is still there. You "only"
need to bend it back. |
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Edge dulled by drawing it across the lip of a glass beaker |
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Here we have a bit of bending but mostly deformation by compression and "filing"
or abrasion, resulting in a blunt edge. Glass is just quite a bit harder than most steels and thus acts as the file; the
softer steel will be the filée |
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The hardness of a material is a reasonable well defined property, I have gone through that. Below are some old examples: |
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Metals | Vickers Hardness | |
Ceramics | Vickers Hardness | Tin (Sn) |
5 | Limestone | 250 |
Aluminum (Al) | 25 | Magnesia (MgO) |
500 | Gold (Au) | 35 |
Window glas | 550 | Copper (Cu) |
40 | Granite | 850 |
Pure iron (Fe) | 80 | Quartz (SiO2) |
1200 | Good tin bronze (Cu + 10% Sn) | 220 |
"China" (Mostly Al2O3) | 2500 |
Mild steel | 140 | Tungstencarbide (WC) |
2500 | Hardened steel (extreme) | 900 |
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Polymers | Polypropylene | 7 | |
Polyvinylchloride (PVC) | 16 | Polycarbonate |
14 | | Epoxy | 45 |
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This table makes clear why our ancient forebears were reluctant to embrace early
iron technology, considering that they had marvellous bronze blades that were generally superior to blades made from wrought
iron or mild steel. It also makes clear why case-hardening the edge of a steel blade
by quenching makes all the difference. You might end up with
an edge that could, in principle, cut glass or granite! However, the first
law of economics still applies! You pay dearly because there are plenty of problems, too:
- You need good and homogeneous carbon steel to start from.
- You can re-sharpen your edge only a few times (if at all) because you quickly wear off the thin layer of hard martensite.
- Your edge is rather brittle and chips easily.
The Japanese sword demonstrates what it takes to make
the best out of extreme edge hardening while not yet in possession of superior modern steel that was liquid once and can be cast.
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Now to the trickier points of blunting a blade. All of us know that our kitchen
knifes will eventually become dull even if we never ever try to cut anything hard! One of the key words hear is "wear" and
with that you open the door to hell. I'm not going through it. I'll just show two pictures demonstrating what can happen: |
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| Formerly sharp (and hard) knife blade after cutting
about 7 m of heavy (but soft) cardboard |
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| Razor edge after cutting a few cm of bond paper |
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Paper is normally considered to be much softer than hard steel. But "steter
Tropfen höhlt den Stein" (constant dripping wears the stone) as the Germans know, and the wear of the steel cylinders
of rotary presses (used, e.g. for your newspaper) caused by their exposure to "soft" paper is a major issue in
technology. |
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If you want to know more than that, you are best of by reading the article of
Verhoeven and colleagues about wear of steel blades
4). Here is the abstract: . |
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A study is presented on the relative wear rates of two carbon steels, a Damascus (wootz)
steel and a stainless steel, using the Cutlery and Allied Trades Research Association (CATRA) of Sheffield England cutting
test machine. The carbon steels and stainless steel were heat treated to produce a fine array of carbides in a martensite
matrix. Tests were done at hardness values of HRC=41 and 61. At HRC=61 the stainless steel had slightly superior cutting
performance over the carbon steels, while at HRC=41 the Damascus steel had slightly superior cutting performance. |
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1) |
C: T. McCarhty, M.Hussey, and M. D.Gilchrist: "On the sharpness of straight
edge blades in cutting soft solids: Part I - indentation experiments", Engineering Fracture Mechanics, Vol 74 (2007)
p. 2205 -2224 Available in the Net |
2) |
P. Stahle, A. Spagnoli, and M. Terzano: "On the fracture process of cutting",
Procedia Structural Integrity, Vol. 3 (2017) P. 468 - 476 |
3) |
John D. Verhoeven: Experiments on Knife Sharpening Directly published in
the Net |
4) |
John D. Verhoeven, Alfred H. Pendray, Howard F. Clark: "Wear tests of steel
knife blades"Wear, 265 (2008) pp 1093 – 1099 |
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© H. Föll (Iron, Steel and Swords script)