Material Properties Science Shyan-Lung Chung Professor Department of Chemical Engineering National Cheng Kung University
Introduction to the Course
Chapter 1 Introduction STRUCTURE AND PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS Part Ⅰ STRUCTURE AND PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS Chapter 2 Atomic Scale Structure: Interatomic Bonding Chapter 3 Atomic Scale Structure: Atomic Packing and Coordination Numbers Chapter 4 Crystal Structure: Fundamental Crystallography, Crystal Structure of Metals and X-Ray Diffraction Course Outline
Chapter 5 Crystal Structure: Crystal Structure of Ceramics Chapter 6 Imperfections of Structures Chapter 7 Structure and Properties of Materials Chapter 8 Phase Diagrams and Microstructure Development Structure and Properties of Materials Part II Structure and Properties of Materials Chapter 9 Mechanical Properties Fundamentals
Chapter 10 Mechanical Properties: Dislocations and Plastic Deformation Microstructure and Mechanical Strength Chapter 11 Mechanical Properties: Failure and Fracture Mechanics Mechanical Properties of Ceramics Chapter 12 Applications and Processing of Materials Chapter 13 Properties of Materials Chapter 14 Optical Properties of Materials
1.W. D. Callister Jr. and D.G. Rethwisch, “Materials Science and Engineering”, John Wiley & Son. Inc. 8th ed. (2011) 2.J. P. Schaffer, A. Saxena, S. D. Antolovich, T. H. Sanders, Jr., S. B. Warner, “The Science and Design of Engineering Materials”, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2nd or the newest ed.) 3.M. W. Barsoum, ”Fundamentals of Ceramics”, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. (1997 or the newest ed.) Required text: None COURSE MATERIALS Optional Materials: Lecture Notes: posted on the course website hungSL/index.php hungSL/index.php
Syllabus Lecture notes Homework assignments Exam announcements Answer keys Grades Supplementary materials COURSE WEBSITE
TA of this course: Shu-Chi Huang( 黃姝綺 ) (a senior Ph.D graduate student). 93A17 Office: 93A17 X Phone: X
Exams (70%) One midterm (35%) One final (35%) Homeworks (20%) Performance in class (10%) attendance or absence participation in discussion Evaluation and Score
About homeworks Homework assignments will be posted on the course website. Unless otherwise mentioned, each homework problem counts 10 points. (Depending on degree of difficulty, some problems will count more points and this will be marked on the problems. ) Homeworks must be handed in before 5:10PM on the due dates. Points will be deducted for late hand-ins. For those obviously copied from others, no points will be given.