Materials Science and Engineering-Chapter 11
Materials Science and Engineering-Chapter 11
of Metal Alloys
Ferrous Alloys
The widespread use of ferrous alloys is due to the abundance of iron in the earths
crust, the low prices of extracting and refining iron, and to irons versatility as it can
be tailored to have a wide range of mechanical and physical properties. The
principal disadvantage is corrosion.
White Iron and Malleable Iron (produced in less quantities than other cast
irons) p.371
Low Si, rapid cooling rate, cementite instead of graphite. Thick sections may have
white iron surfaces, but gray iron cores. Low ductility, high hardness and very wear
resistant. Heating white iron to 800-900 degrees Celsius for long time in neutral
atmosphere, decomposed cementite into graphite rosettes or clusters, over ferrite
or pearlite matrix. High strength and appreciable ductility. Used for automotive
parts, valves for marine, railroad and other heavy-duty services.
Aluminum p.374
Pure aluminum is unaffected by change in temperature. 7075 (5.6 Zn, 2.5 Mg, 1.6
Cu, 0.23 Cr), 6061 (1.0 Mg, 0.6 Si, 0.30 Cu, 0.20 Cr) and 2024 (4.4 Cu, 1.5 Mg, 0.6
Mn) aluminums are heat treatable, can have enhanced mechanical properties and
are lightweight. Aluminum has a relatively low melting point. In 2024 Aluminum, the
-phase in the phase diagram is CuAl2 and normally appears as small grains on
the boundaries of the
treatment enhances properties. First solutionizing (dissolve CuAl 2) at high T=Ts, then
quenching (supersaturated ), and finally aging (intermediate temperature
between room temperature and TS).
Further Remarks
Martensitic Stainless Steel (high-carbon): Tempered Martensite makes the
Ferrite and Iron Carbide phases reappear in the microstructure. The iron carbide is a
precipitate.
Precipitation Hardenable Stainless Steel (low-carbon): Contains
approximately 17% Cr, 7% Ni with hints of Al and Mn (p.365). Fe, Al and Mn
precipitate and not iron carbide.
Addition of Nickel promotes formation of Austenite, while addition of Chromium
promotes that of Ferrite.
Jominy Test: Relates hardness to distance of section from quenched surface. This
distance reflects the cooling rate (p. 396). The thicker the section, the larger the
gradient. Alloying elements decrease the gap between surface and core (p.397).