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Properties of materials. The behaviour of a given material is characterised by the response to a stimulus. Mechanical properties (behaviour under a set.

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Presentation on theme: "Properties of materials. The behaviour of a given material is characterised by the response to a stimulus. Mechanical properties (behaviour under a set."— Presentation transcript:

1 Properties of materials

2 The behaviour of a given material is characterised by the response to a stimulus. Mechanical properties (behaviour under a set of forces) Physical properties (behaviour under action of temperature, electrical or magnetic fields or radiation) Chemical properties (behaviour under the action of chemicals)

3 Mechanical properties studied as: time –independent time-dependent temperature-dependent

4 Applying a force to a structure causes a stress bringing about a strain. STRESS or TENSION  : the ration between force F and the surface A to which is applied (Nm -2 o Pa).  = F/A Three main types of stress: TENSILE, COMPRESSION and SHEAR

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7 ELASTIC If, once removed the applied force, the material gains the initial state, such behavior is said to be ELASTIC

8 linear elastic behavior non linear elastic behavior (rubber) Anelastic behavior E elastic Hysteresis

9 LINEAR All materials, for small stresses, show a LINEAR elastic behavior (Hooke’s law) σ = E ε E = elastic modulus (Young modulus, dimensions of a pressure)

10 Curiously, the cause (load) is on the abscissa scale)

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12 Covalent or ionic solids Metals Polymers E T melt

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14 Tensile measurements: fragile (brittle) materials break beyond the elastic limit (ceramics, glasses) ductile materials (metals, polymers): plastic deformation

15 Fragile Material Ductile material

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19 Toughness Toughness measures the energy a material can store before breaking Area under the curve!

20 Indeed, a corrected curve should be used… striction

21 Another measure of the cohesive strength of the material: tenacity Charpy pendulum

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23 Time dependent mechanical properties: Creep Fatigue

24 CREEP A constant static load may cause deformation Not so important at ambient temperature, i.e. with biomaterials Relevant process when T > 0,3-0,4T melt (Metals and ceramics) T > T g (Polymers and glasses)

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26 FATIGUE Degration in mechanical properties when a material is subjected to cyclic stresses Samples are subjected to different loads, and the number of cycles cause breakdown is measured at each load

27 Often, a limit value for the load (FATIGUE LIMIT) is observed

28 HARDNESS Property of the external layers of a material: resistance to scratching (Mohs’ scale), to abrasion and to plastic deformation upon compression. Measure: i) formation of an indentation by applying a static constant load for a definite time; ii) evaluation of the dimension

29 Rockwell Method

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31 Ultimate Tensile strength Relationship between hardness and UTS

32 THERMAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS

33 Thermal capacity* Thermal expansion* Thermal c onductivity Resistance to t hermal shocks* * Not really important in biomaterials

34 THERMAL CAPACITY Attitude of a body to store heat Ratio between exchanged heat and change in temperature SPECIFIC HEAT When normalised to unit mass  SPECIFIC HEAT

35 THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY Attitude of a body to transfer heat The thermal conductivity coefficient is defined through Fourier’s law: the heat flux across a unit surface is proportional to the temperature gradient (with inverted sign)

36 THERMAL EXPANSION Usually all solids expand when heated Coefficient of linear thermal expansion ()=

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38 Chemical characterization Often surface only

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40 Others: HRTEM Adsorption (porous systems)

41 Contact angle: Measures the wettability of a surface by a liquid Usually water or aqueous solutions (hydrophobicity/hydrophilicity) Also the surface tension of the solid

42   lv  sl  sv BIOGLASS SILANIZED

43 Ways of measuring contact angles

44 ESCA Highly energetic X-rays cause expulsion of the electrons of the inner cores, which have different binding energies, so allowing chemical determination

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47 Infrared Spectroscopy: functional groups in a molecule are recognized through their vibrational features A well developed technique, very powerful…

48 Versions of the technique for surface analysis

49 Scanning tunneling microscope

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51 The end


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