ISO

ISO, the International Organization for Standardization, publishes international standards used across manufacturing, laboratory testing, quality systems, and technical procurement. In material testing, ISO references are widely used when organizations need procedures that can be recognized across countries, plants, suppliers, and customer requirements.

For laboratories, QA teams, R&D groups, and procurement teams, ISO methods often define how a specimen is prepared, how a property is measured, what conditions apply, and how the result is reported. That makes ISO especially relevant when test data needs to move across technical teams and global supply chains.

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ISO Standards

ISO publishes International Standards across many technical sectors. In material testing, ISO documents are commonly used for plastics, metals, rubber, corrosion, hardness, impact, calibration, and other physical-property evaluations.

Because ISO is global in scope, its methods are often selected when a company wants one recognized reference across multiple regions or suppliers. The exact document, part number, and edition still matter, especially when equipment setup, specimen geometry, or reporting rules must match a customer requirement.


Quick Definition

ISO is a global standards body that publishes International Standards. In a materials laboratory, an ISO reference usually identifies a defined test method, test condition set, or verification procedure rather than a general recommendation.


Why ISO Standards Matter in Testing

ISO standards matter because they help laboratories and manufacturers work from a shared technical framework. When tensile strength, hardness, impact energy, corrosion resistance, or machine verification results need to be compared across sites, ISO references help reduce avoidable variation in method setup and reporting.

They also matter commercially. Export programs, multinational sourcing, supplier qualification, and customer validation work often depend on results produced to a recognized international method. Equipment selection should still be matched to the exact cited document and edition, because the standard itself remains the controlling reference for procedure details and acceptance language.


Common Materials or Application Areas Covered

ISO material-testing work spans many sectors. Common application areas in industrial laboratories include the following:

  • Plastics and polymer compounds
  • Rubber and elastomers
  • Metallic materials
  • Coatings and corrosion-protected surfaces
  • Powders and porous solids
  • Textiles, leather, and related products

Within those areas, ISO references may address raw materials, semi-finished forms, finished products, or the verification of the equipment used to generate test data.


Common Test Types

ISO documents in material testing are commonly associated with practical laboratory workflows that connect directly to equipment choice and reporting software.

Common workflows: Tensile testing, flexural testing, hardness testing, impact testing, corrosion testing, force verification, extensometer calibration, and surface-area measurement.

Common decisions influenced by the method: Load frame capacity, grip style, fixture geometry, strain-measurement approach, environmental control, calibration path, and report content.


How to Read an ISO Designation

ISO designations are usually straightforward, but the details matter in purchasing and laboratory work.

Prefix: ISO identifies the document as an ISO publication.

Number: The main number identifies the standard or standard series, such as ISO 178 or ISO 9227.

Part number: Many ISO documents are multipart standards, so a hyphenated part number narrows the requirement, such as ISO 6892-1 or ISO 6507-1.

Year: A full citation often adds the publication year after a colon, such as ISO 37:2024 or ISO 9227:2022. If a customer or specification cites a year, that edition should be checked before equipment is configured or data is compared.


Featured Standards / Methods / References

The ISO system is broad, but several documents are especially relevant to common material-testing workflows and equipment decisions.

Standard Testing focus Typical equipment path
ISO 527-2:2025 Tensile properties of moulding and extrusion plastics Universal testing machine, suitable grips, strain measurement
ISO 178:2019 Flexural properties of rigid and semi-rigid plastics Universal testing machine with three-point bend fixture
ISO 37:2024 Tensile stress-strain properties of vulcanized or thermoplastic rubber Universal testing machine, elastomer grips, extension measurement
ISO 6892-1:2019 Room-temperature tensile testing of metallic materials Universal testing machine, metal grips, extensometer
ISO 6507-1:2023 Vickers hardness testing Vickers hardness tester, optical measurement system
ISO 148-1:2016 Charpy pendulum impact testing of metallic materials Pendulum impact tester, Charpy supports and striker
ISO 9227:2022 Salt spray corrosion testing Salt spray chamber, specimen racks, solution control accessories
ISO 7500-1:2018 Calibration and verification of static uniaxial testing machines Force verification tools, calibrated reference devices, testing machine verification setup

Standards / Methods by Application Area

Different ISO references point to different test systems, even when the materials lab already owns a general-purpose frame or chamber.

Plastics: ISO 527-2 and ISO 178 are common references for tensile and flexural evaluation of rigid and semi-rigid plastics.

Rubber and elastomers: ISO 37 is commonly used for tensile stress-strain work on vulcanized or thermoplastic rubber.

Metals: ISO 6892-1 supports tensile testing at room temperature, ISO 6507-1 supports Vickers hardness work, and ISO 148-1 with ISO 14556 addresses Charpy impact testing.

Corrosion and surface evaluation: ISO 9227 covers salt spray exposure, while ISO 9277 addresses BET surface-area determination for suitable solids.

Machine verification and strain measurement: ISO 7500-1, ISO 9513, and ISO 376 are commonly associated with force and extensometer performance in uniaxial testing systems.


Equipment Commonly Used with These Standards / Methods / References

ISO standards connect directly to practical equipment decisions. The right configuration depends on the material, force range, specimen geometry, strain-measurement requirement, and whether the cited document is a product test or a verification procedure.

Universal testing machines: Commonly used for plastics, rubber, and metals tensile or flexural work under documents such as ISO 527-2, ISO 178, ISO 37, and ISO 6892-1.

Extensometers and strain-measurement systems: Often needed where extension or strain is part of the reported result, and calibration may be tied to ISO 9513.

Hardness testers: Used for ISO Vickers hardness workflows such as ISO 6507-1.

Pendulum impact systems: Used for Charpy workflows such as ISO 148-1 and instrumented variants such as ISO 14556.

Salt spray chambers: Used for ISO 9227 corrosion exposure work, together with specimen supports and solution-control accessories.

Calibration and verification tools: Force-proving instruments and related fixtures are commonly associated with ISO 376 and ISO 7500-1.

Gas adsorption analyzers: Used where ISO 9277 BET surface-area measurement is required.


Related Standards Organizations or Related Frameworks

ISO is often used alongside other standards systems depending on the market, product, and customer requirement.

ASTM International: ASTM methods are commonly used alongside ISO references in materials testing, especially in North American and multinational supply chains.

CEN / EN: European standards work often intersects with ISO, and many product requirements bring EN and ISO references together.

IEC: IEC becomes important when a project moves from general material-property testing into electrical, electronic, or electrotechnical product requirements.


Need Equipment for an ISO Test Method?

If your requirement cites an ISO document, the best equipment path starts with the exact standard designation, part number, material type, force range, and reporting needs. A plastics tensile setup, a metallic tensile system, a Vickers hardness tester, and a salt spray chamber all solve very different ISO workflows.

NextGen Material Testing can help match ISO-based testing needs to practical equipment configurations, including universal testing machines, grips, fixtures, extensometers, hardness testers, pendulum impact systems, salt spray chambers, and calibration-related accessories.

Standards In ISO

ISO 10113:2006

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ISO 105-C01

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ISO 105-C02

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ISO 105-C03

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ISO 105-C04

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ISO 105-C05

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ISO 105-C06

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ISO 105-C08

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ISO 105-C09

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ISO 105-C10

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ISO 105-D01

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ISO 105-E03

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ISO 105-E12

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ISO 105-X12

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ISO 105-X12 / D02

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ISO 1133

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ISO 11640

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ISO 1183

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ISO 1184

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ISO 12402-7

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ISO 12945-2

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ISO 12947-1

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ISO 12947-2

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ISO 12947-3

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ISO 12947-4

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ISO 132

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ISO 13802

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ISO 13938.1

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ISO 14556

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ISO 148

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ISO 148

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ISO 148-2

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ISO 148-3

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ISO 17694

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ISO 17700 Method A

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ISO 178

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ISO 179

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ISO 180

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ISO 18625

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ISO 188

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ISO 1974

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ISO 20344

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ISO 20868

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ISO 24266 Method A

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ISO 2439

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ISO 2507

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ISO 2759

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ISO 2781

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ISO 289

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ISO 306

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ISO 3108

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ISO 3127

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ISO 3183

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ISO 32100

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ISO 37

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ISO 376

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ISO 4422

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ISO 4545-2

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ISO 4577

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ISO 4649

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ISO 4662

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ISO 4674-2

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ISO 527

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ISO 5402-1

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ISO 5423

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ISO 5470-2

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ISO 604

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ISO 6383-2

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ISO 6502

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ISO 6506

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ISO 6507

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ISO 667

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ISO 6892

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ISO 6892-1

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ISO 6892-2

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ISO 7267-3

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ISO 7438

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ISO 75

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ISO 7500

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ISO 7500-1

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ISO 7800

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ISO 8256

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ISO 8307

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ISO 9227

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ISO 9277

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ISO 9290

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ISO 9352

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ISO 9513

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ISO 9854.1

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ISO-5470

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ISO-7784-2

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