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Introduction to Materials Science & Engineering

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Materials Science & Engineering"— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Materials Science & Engineering
Course Objective... Introduce fundamental concepts in Materials Science & Engineering You will learn about: • material structures • how structure dictates properties • how processing can change structure This course will help you to: • use materials properly • realize new design opportunities with materials

2 COURSE MATERIALS (with WileyPLUS)
Required text: • WileyPLUS for Fundamentals of Materials Science and Engineering, W.D. Callister, Jr. and D.G. Rethwisch, 4th edition, John Wiley and Sons, Inc. (2012). Website: Can be bought online at wileyplus.com for 40% of textbook price Includes complete online version of textbook Or comes bundled with textbook at bookstore $5 more than textbook alone Homework assignments with instant feedback and hints Computer graded self-help problems Hotlinks in homework to supporting text sections Quizzes

3 WEBSITES Course Website: http://www.xxx.edu/xxxxx
Syllabus Lecture notes Solution manual Grades Text Website: VMSE for 3D interactive simulations and animations of material structures, characteristics, and properties Mechanical Engineering online support module Case studies of materials usage Extended learning objectives Self-assessment exercises

4 Virtual Materials Science & Engineering (VMSE)
Website: Student Companion Site  VMSE Comprised of 8 interactive modules Atomic/molecular stuctures - 3D perspectives (better visualizations) using click-and-drag rotations Demonstrations of defects and phenomena that exist/occur in materials Demonstrations of material tests - performance and results Database of material property values and costs

5 Virtual Materials Science & Engineering (VMSE)
• This is a screenshot of the VMSE opening window • Available in Student Companion Site at and in WileyPLUS

6 Chapter 1 - Introduction
What is materials science? Why should we know about it? Materials drive our society Stone Age Bronze Age Iron Age Now? Silicon Age? Polymer Age?

7 Example – Hip Implant With age or certain illnesses joints deteriorate. Particularly those with large loads (such as hip). Adapted from Fig , Callister 7e.

8 Example – Hip Implant Requirements mechanical strength (many cycles)
good lubricity biocompatibility Adapted from Fig , Callister 7e.

9 Example – Hip Implant Adapted from Fig , Callister 7e.

10 Hip Implant Key problems to overcome
fixation agent to hold acetabular cup cup lubrication material femoral stem – fixing agent must avoid any debris in cup Ball Acetabular Cup and Liner Femoral Stem Adapted from chapter-opening photograph, Chapter 22, Callister 7e.

11 Example – Develop New Types of Polymers
Commodity plastics – large volume ca. $0.50 / lb Ex. Polyethylene Polypropylene Polystyrene etc.  Engineering Resins – small volume > $1.00 / lb Ex. Polycarbonate Nylon Polysulfone etc.   Can polypropylene be “upgraded” to properties (and price) near those of engineering resins?

12 Structure, Processing, & Properties
• Properties depend on structure ex: hardness vs structure of steel (d) 30 mm 6 00 5 00 (c) 4 mm Data obtained from Figs (a) and with 4 wt% C composition, and from Fig and associated discussion, Callister & Rethwisch 4e. Micrographs adapted from (a) Fig. 11.19; (b) Fig ;(c) Fig ; and (d) Fig , Callister & Rethwisch 4e. 4 00 (b) 30 mm (a) 30 mm Hardness (BHN) 3 00 2 00 100 0.01 0.1 1 10 100 1000 Cooling Rate (ºC/s) • Processing can change structure ex: structure vs cooling rate of steel

13 Types of Materials Metals:
Strong, ductile High thermal & electrical conductivity Opaque, reflective. Polymers/plastics: Covalent bonding  sharing of e’s Soft, ductile, low strength, low density Thermal & electrical insulators Optically translucent or transparent. Ceramics: ionic bonding (refractory) – compounds of metallic & non-metallic elements (oxides, carbides, nitrides, sulfides) Brittle, glassy, elastic Non-conducting (insulators) Metals have high thermal & electrical conductivity because valence electrons are free to roam

14 The Materials Selection Process
1. Pick Application Determine required Properties Properties: mechanical, electrical, thermal, magnetic, optical, deteriorative. 2. Properties Identify candidate Material(s) Material: structure, composition. 3. Material Identify required Processing Processing: changes structure and overall shape ex: casting, sintering, vapor deposition, doping forming, joining, annealing.

15 ELECTRICAL • Electrical Resistivity of Copper: Resistivity, r T (ºC)
-200 -100 Cu at%Ni Cu at%Ni deformed Cu at%Ni 1 2 3 4 5 6 Resistivity, r (10-8 Ohm-m) Cu at%Ni “Pure” Cu Adapted from Fig. 12.8, Callister & Rethwisch 4e. (Fig adapted from: J.O. Linde, Ann Physik 5, 219 (1932); and C.A. Wert and R.M. Thomson, Physics of Solids, 2nd edition, McGraw-Hill Company, New York, 1970.) • Adding “impurity” atoms to Cu increases resistivity. • Deforming Cu increases resistivity.

16 THERMAL • Space Shuttle Tiles: • Thermal Conductivity of Copper:
-- Silica fiber insulation offers low heat conduction. • Thermal Conductivity of Copper: -- It decreases when you add zinc! Adapted from chapter-opening photograph, Chapter 17, Callister & Rethwisch 3e. (Courtesy of Lockheed Missiles and Space Company, Inc.) Composition (wt% Zinc) Thermal Conductivity (W/m-K) 400 300 200 100 10 20 30 40 100 mm Adapted from Fig. 19.4W, Callister 6e. (Courtesy of Lockheed Aerospace Ceramics Systems, Sunnyvale, CA) (Note: "W" denotes fig. is on CD-ROM.) Adapted from Fig. 17.4, Callister & Rethwisch 4e. (Fig is adapted from Metals Handbook: Properties and Selection: Nonferrous alloys and Pure Metals, Vol. 2, 9th ed., H. Baker, (Managing Editor), American Society for Metals, 1979, p. 315.)

17 MAGNETIC • Magnetic Permeability • Magnetic Storage: vs. Composition:
-- Recording medium is magnetized by recording head. • Magnetic Permeability vs. Composition: -- Adding 3 atomic % Si makes Fe a better recording medium! Magnetic Field Magnetization Fe+3%Si Fe Adapted from C.R. Barrett, W.D. Nix, and A.S. Tetelman, The Principles of Engineering Materials, Fig. 1-7(a), p. 9, Electronically reproduced by permission of Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. Fig , Callister & Rethwisch 4e.

18 OPTICAL • Transmittance:
-- Aluminum oxide may be transparent, translucent, or opaque depending on the material’s structure (i.e., single crystal vs. polycrystal, and degree of porosity). single crystal polycrystal: no porosity some porosity Adapted from Fig. 1.2, Callister & Rethwisch 4e. (Specimen preparation, P.A. Lessing; photo by S. Tanner.)

19 DETERIORATIVE • Stress & Saltwater... • Heat treatment: slows
-- causes cracks! • Heat treatment: slows crack speed in salt water! “held at 160ºC for 1 hr before testing” increasing load crack speed (m/s) “as-is” 10 -10 -8 Alloy 7178 tested in saturated aqueous NaCl solution at 23ºC Adapted from Fig , Callister & Rethwisch 4e. (from Marine Corrosion, Causes, and Prevention, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 1975.) Adapted from Fig (b), R.W. Hertzberg, "Deformation and Fracture Mechanics of Engineering Materials" (4th ed.), p. 505, John Wiley and Sons, (Original source: Markus O. Speidel, Brown Boveri Co.)

20 SUMMARY Course Goals: • Use the right material for the job.
• Understand the relation between properties, structure, and processing. • Recognize new design opportunities offered by materials selection.


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