Aircraft Materials
Aircraft Materials
Aircraft Materials
AND PROCESSES
Properties of Materials
Properties of Material
Hardness
- refers to the ability of a material to resist abrasion,
penetration, cutting action, or permanent distortion.
Strength
- one of the most important properties of a material is
strength. Strength is the ability of a material to resist
deformation. Strength is also the ability of a material to resist
stress without breaking.
Density
- Is the materials mass per unit volume.
Malleability
- is the ability to be bent or molded into different forms.
Ductility
- Is the ability to be drawn out into a thin wire form.
Elasticity
- is the property that enables a metal to return to its
original size and shape when the force which causes the change
of shape is removed.
Toughness
-a material which possesses toughness will withstand
tearing or shearing and breaking.
Brittleness
- describes a material's tendency to break or shatter when exposed
to stress.
Fusibility
- is the ability of a metal to become liquid by the
application of heat.
Conductivity
- is the property which enables a metal to carry heat or
electricity.
Thermal Expansion
- refers to contraction and expansion that are reactions
produced in metals as the result of heating or cooling.
Classifications of Metal
Non-Ferrous Metal
Much of the metal used on today's aircraft contains no iron.
Aluminum, copper, titanium, and magnesium are some of the
most common nonferrous metals used in aircraft construction
and repair.
Aluminum alloys
* For 1xxx series, the last two digits indicates hundredths above 1 percent of pure
aluminum.
Alloy 2024
- Is the most popular structural aluminum alloy. Its
strength is equivalent to the mild steel, but its susceptible to
corrosion.
Alloy 3003
- It is similar to 1100 and is used for the same types of
applications. It is nonheat treatable but it can be hardened by
cold working.
Alloy 5052
- Is used for welded applications such as fuel tanks and
for rigid fluid lines.
Alloy 6061
- Used in applications where heat treatability, ease
forming, medium strength, and good corrosion resistance are
needed.
Alloy 7075
- Used for high strength structural requirements.
Clad Aluminum
- An aluminum alloy sheet that has a coating of pure aluminum
rolled onto its surface.
- The pure aluminum cladding protects the core alloy sheet from
corrosion.
Other alloys
Magnesium and Magnesium Alloy
- Is the lightest structural metal, weighing only about two
thirds as much as aluminum.
Ferrous Metal
Any alloy containing iron as its chief constituent is called a
ferrous metal.
Hot Working
Forging - is typically used to form intricate shapes and is
accomplished through either pressing or hammering.
1. Pressing - It is used to form large and heavy parts. This affects
the interior grain structure resulting in the best possible
structurethroughout.
2. Drop Forging - It is a hammering process whereby a hot ingot
is placed between a pair of formed dies in a machine called a
drop hammer and a weight of several tons is dropped on the
upper die.
Cold Working
Cold-working strain hardens the worked metal, increasing its
strength and hardness but decreasing ductility.
1. Cold Rolling - Usually refers to the rolling of metal at room
temperature to its approximate size.
Extrusion
The process of forcing metal through a die which imparts a
required cross-section to the metal.
Heat Treatment
Heat Treatment
A process of heating a metal to improves the metal properties
such as hardness, ductility, toughness and others.
It may also remove some internal and external stresses and
strain to reduce metal failure.
Critical Temperature of a Metal - the temperature at which the
internal structure of a metal takes on a crystalline form.
1.)Hardening
- The metal is heated at the furnace with a temperature
above its critical temperature, quench it at this
temperature, and allow cooling at room temperature.
Quenching Medium:
1. Brine fastest quench that produces the hardest steel.
2. Water produces slightly less hardness.
3. Oil slowest quench.
2.) Normalizing
- The metal is heated to a temperature above its critical
temperature and allowed to cool in still air.
3.) Annealing
- Also called softening.
- Annealing produces a fine-grain, soft, ductile metal
without internal stresses or strains.
- By heating the steel metal to just above the upper
critical point.
4.) Tempering
- A form of heat treatment in which brittleness is
removed from the metal but it may also reduces some
hardness.
5.) Case Hardening
a.) Nitriding- A method of case hardening steel by
heating it in an atmosphere of ammonia.
b.) Carburizing - A case hardening process in which
additional carbon is infused into the surface of lowcarbon steel.
Temper Designations
Basic Temper Designation
F As fabricated
O Annealed
H Strain hardened (Non heat treatable products only)
Temper Designation for Non Heat Treatable Alloys
H1 Strain hardened produced by cold working the metal to the
desired dimension.
H2 Strain hardened, then partially annealed to remove some of the
hardness.
H3 Strain hardened, then stabilized.
The degree of hardening is indicated by a second digit following one