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Researching Material Properties

Product Design and Technologies
StudyPulse

Researching Material Properties

Product Design and Technologies
01 May 2026

Methods to Research Characteristics and Properties of Materials

Why Research Material Properties?

Material selection is one of the most consequential decisions a designer makes. The wrong material — however aesthetically appropriate — can result in product failure, safety risks, sustainability problems, or production challenges.

Researching material properties involves both secondary research (reading existing knowledge) and primary research (hands-on experimentation).

Material Properties to Investigate

Mechanical properties:
- Tensile strength (resistance to pulling apart)
- Compressive strength (resistance to crushing)
- Hardness (resistance to surface scratching/indentation)
- Toughness (resistance to impact/fracture)
- Flexibility/stiffness (modulus of elasticity)
- Fatigue resistance (performance under repeated loading)

Physical properties:
- Density (mass per unit volume — affects weight of product)
- Thermal conductivity (heat transfer — relevant for handles, insulation)
- Electrical conductivity
- Optical properties (transparency, opacity, reflectivity)

Aesthetic properties:
- Colour, grain pattern, texture
- Surface finish potential (how well it takes polish, paint, dye)
- Lustre and sheen

Workability properties:
- How easily can it be cut, shaped, bent, joined?
- Does it splinter, delaminate, or crack under tooling?
- What tools and processes are required?

Sustainability properties:
- Source (renewable, recycled, virgin)
- Biodegradability or recyclability
- Embodied energy
- Toxicity (processing, use, end-of-life)

Secondary Research Methods

  • Material data sheets (MSDS/SDS): Manufacturer-supplied documents detailing composition, properties, and safety information
  • Standards documents: Australian and ISO standards specify minimum property requirements for materials in defined applications
  • Product catalogues and supplier specifications: Detailed property tables from material suppliers
  • Academic texts and design references: Detailed property data and case studies
  • Online material databases: (e.g. MatWeb, CES EduPack) — searchable databases of material properties

Primary Research: Experimentation and Trial Processes

Cutting and machining trials
- Cut samples with available tools; note ease of cutting, quality of cut edge, tendency to chip or splinter
- Compare different materials side by side

Bending and forming tests
- Bend samples to determine minimum bend radius without cracking
- Test formability with heat (thermoplastics); cold-bending capacity (metal)

Joining trials
- Test adhesive bonds, mechanical fasteners, and joinery methods
- Load test joints to failure; compare strength

Finishing trials
- Apply candidate finishes (paint, oil, varnish, dye) to sample pieces
- Assess adhesion, colour, durability, and user feel

Wear and durability tests
- Simulate use conditions: abrasion, moisture, UV exposure, impact
- Compare results across candidate materials

Recording Experimentation Results

  • Photograph samples before and after testing
  • Record observations in a structured table (material, test, result, conclusion)
  • Annotate samples with reference numbers matching the record
  • Compare results against evaluation criteria requirements

KEY TAKEAWAY: Material selection must be based on evidence. Secondary research provides baseline data; experimentation validates performance in the specific production and use context of the design.

EXAM TIP: Distinguish between secondary research (existing knowledge) and primary experimentation (your own tests). VCAA rewards evidence that you have trialled materials, not just researched them theoretically.

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