“…In the early 1900s, various impact tests were developed, originally to test the quality of armor plate and boiler steels, and the ASTM E23 method for Charpy impact testing procedure was tentatively released in 1933 [1]. The use of Charpy testing has expanded greatly, and examples of industries that rely on Charpy testing today include shipbuilding [7][8][9], nuclear power [10,11], armor [12], rail [13,14], construction [15], steam turbine [16], piping and pressure vessel [17][18][19], liquified natural gas storage [20], hydrogen storage [21], additive manufacturing [22], aluminum alloy development [23], and composites [24]. The principles and methods described in this paper are relevant to many critical structural applications but will be analyzed and discussed with respect to steel line pipes widely used in natural gas and hazardous liquid pipelines.…”