Chapter 2 - Fundemental of Meterials
Chapter 2 - Fundemental of Meterials
Chapter 2 - Fundemental of Meterials
Duong – HUST
CHAPTER 2.
FUNDAMENTALS OF MATERIALS
2.1. The Structure of Metals
Material properties and behaviors depend on their structure.
Structure: the arrangement of the atoms within metals.
Figure 2.1. The body-centered cubic (bcc) crystal structure: (a) hard-ball
model; (b) unit cell; and (c) single crystal with many unit cells.
2
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
3
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Terminology
4
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Before deformation
P
After deformation
5
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
6
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
• Grains can be
regarded as
randomly
oriented
crystals.
• Solidification
process:
usually metal
changes from
liquid to solid
state with
polycrystals.
Figure 2.10 The stages during solidification of molten metal; (a) Nucleation of
crystals at random sites in the molten metal; (b) and (c) Growth of crystals as
solidification continues. (d) Solidified metal.
7
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2.1
TABLE 1.1
ASTM No. Grains/mm2 Grains/mm3
• Grain size: the smaller the –3
–2
1
2
0.7
2
grain size, the stronger, harder, –1 4 5.6
0 8 16
and more ductile the metal. 1 16 45
2 32 128
• Fine grain: referred to sizes 5 3 64 360
4 128 1,020
to 8. 5 256 2,900
6 512 8,200
• Size 7: typically acceptable for 7 1,024 23,000
8 2,048 65,000
making car bodies, appliances, 9 4,096 185,000
10 8,200 520,000
kitchen utensils. 11 16,400 1,500,000
12 32,800 4,200,000
8
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
10
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2.2
TABLE 1.2
Process T/Tm
Cold working < 0.3
Warm working 0.3 to 0.5
Hot working > 0.6
11
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
12
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
e
l l0
l0
l – Instantaneous length; l0 –
Original lenth.
Modulus of elasticity:
E
e
Figure 2.17 A typical stress- strain curve obtained from Also called Young modulus
a tension test, showing various features. (the above relationship is the
Hooke’s law). 13
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2) Ductility
Poisson’s ratio (ν): the absolute value of the ratio of the lateral
strain to the longitudinal strain.
Ductility: the extent of plastic deformation before fracture,
expressed in two measures:
1. Elongation Elongation, %:
2. Reduction of area. l f l0
El
100
l0
l – Original length; lf – Length before fracture
(final length) (see Fig. 2.1).
Reduction of area, %:
RA
A A
0
100 f
A0
A0, Af – Original & final cross sectional areas.
14
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
True stress: P
A
P and A: instantaneous load and cross-sectional area,
respectively.
True strain:
l
ln
l0
l: instantaneous length
15
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2.2.2. COMPRESSION
Barreling In
Compression test: specimen subjected Compression
to compressive load – compressing
a solid cylindrical specimen
between 2 well lubricated platens
(barrelling).
Height / Diameter ratio < 3 / 1.
True stress-strain curves:
- The same in both tension and
compression for ductile materials. Figure 2.23 Barreling in
- Stronger and more ductile in compression of a round solid
compression than in tension for cylindrical specimen (7075-O
brittle materials. aluminum) between flat dies.
16
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2.2.3. TORSION
Torsion-Test Specimens
Figure 2.26 Typical torsion-test
specimen; it is mounted
between the two heads of a
testing machine and twisted.
Note the shear deformation of
an element in the reduced
section of the specimen.
2.2.4. BENDING
• Bend test (flexture test): especially useful for brittle materials.
• Stress at fracture in bending: the modulus of rupture, flexural
strength, or transverse rupture strength.
18
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2.2.5. HARDNESS
1) Hardness tests
• Hardness: the
resistance to
permanent
indentation.
• It gives a
general
indication of the
strength of the
material and its
resistance to
scratching and
to wear.
• It is not a
fundamental
property (shape
of the indenter
and load
applied also
have influence).
Figure 2.28 General characteristics of hardness-testing methods and formulas for
calculating hardness. The quantity P is the load applied.
19
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
20
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
21
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2.2.6. FATIGUE
Rapidly fluctuating mechanical and thermal loads make tools, dies,
gears, cams,... undergo cyclic stresses.
Parts therefore may fail at a stress level much lower than its yield
strength, so called the fatigue failure.
Usually a surface crack initiates the fatigue failure.
S-N Curves
Figure 2.31
Typical S-N curves
for two metals.
23
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2.2.7. CREEP
Definition: the permanent
Creep Curve
elongation of a component under
a static load maintained for a
period of time.
Creep at elevated temperature:
associated with grain boundary
sliding.
Applications where creep is
important: gas turbine blades,
high pressure steam piping,
forging operation, etc.
Stress relaxation: the stresses
resulting from loading of a Figure 2.32 Schematic illustration of a typical
structural component decrease in creep curve. The linear segment of the curve
(secondary) is used in designing components
magnitude over a period of time for a specific creep life.
(dimensions remain the same)
24
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2.2.8. IMPACT
Impact test: breaking a
notch specimen with an
impact (impact loading) of a
swinging pendulum at a
specific temperature.
Charpy test and Izod
test. Application: to
determine the ductile-brittle
transition temperature of the Impact Test Specimens
material.
The energy dissipated in
breaking the specimen is the
impact toughness of the
material.
High impact toughness (or
resistance) means high
strength and ductility.
Sensitivity to surface Figure 2.33 Impact test specimens:
defects (notch sensitivity) (a) Charpy; (b) Izod.
lowers impact toughness.
25
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
1) Ductile Fracture
Plastic deformation prior to failure.
Ductile fracture takes place along maximum shear stress planes.
Fibrous pattern with dimples.
2) Brittle Fracture
26
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Residual stresses are stresses that remain within a part after it has
been formed and all the external forced are removed.
Elimination of residual stresses by stretching.
Residual stresses can be also reduced or eliminated by thermal
treatments, such as stress relieving or annealing.
27
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
28
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Table 2.4
3.1 Physical properties of various materials at room temperature.
COEFFI CIENT
THERMAL OF THERMAL
DENSITY MELTI NG POINT SPE CIFIC HEAT CONDUC TIVIT Y EXPA NSION
3
METAL (kg/m ) ( C) (J/kgK) (W/m K) (µm/ C)
Aluminum 2700 660 900 222 23.6
Aluminum alloys 2630-2820 476-654 880-920 121-239 23.0-23.6
Berylium 1854 1278 1884 146 8.5
Columbium (niobium) 8580 2468 272 52 7.1
Copper 8970 1082 385 393 16.5
Copper alloys 7470-8940 885-1260 337-435 29-234 16.5-20
Gold 19300 1063 129 317 19.3
Iron 7860 1537 460 74 11.5
Steels 6920-9130 1371-1532 448-502 15-52 11.7-17.3
Lead 11350 327 130 35 29.4
Lead alloys 8850-11350 182-326 126-188 24-46 27.1-31.1
Magnesium 1745 650 1025 154 26.0
Magnesium alloys 1770-1780 610-621 1046 75-138 26.0
Molybdenum alloys 10210 2610 276 142 5.1
Nickel 8910 1453 440 92 13.3
Nickel alloys 7750-8850 1110-1454 381-544 12-63 12.7-18.4
Silicon 2330 1423 712 148 7.63
Silver 10500 961 235 429 19.3
Tanta lum alloys 16600 2996 142 54 6.5
Titanium 4510 1668 519 17 8.35
Titanium alloys 4430-4700 1549-1649 502-544 8-12 8.1-9.5
Tungsten 19290 3410 138 166 4.5
NONMETAL LIC
Ceramics 2300-5500 - 750-950 10-17 5.5-13.5
Glasses 2400-2700 580-1540 500-850 0.6-1.7 4.6-70
Graphite 1900-2200 - 840 5-10 7.86
Plastics 900-2000 110-330 1000-2000 0.1-0.4 72-200
Wood 400-700 - 2400-2800 0.1-0.4 2-60
29
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2.3.1. DENSITY
30
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Melting point (or melting range for alloys) affects selection of materials for their
operational temperatures. Plastics: lowest; graphite and refractory metals: highest.
Melting point also affects manufacturing operations (annealing, heat treatment,
recrystallization).
Melting points (in K) affects selection of equipment for casting operations.
31
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
33
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2) Intermetallic compounds
Intermetalic compounds are complex structures consisting of two metals in which solute
atoms are present among solvent atoms in certain proportion.
Intermetalic compounds are strong, hard, and brittle. Because of their high melting
points, their strength at elevated temperatures, their good oxidation resistance, and their
relatively low density, they are candidate materials for advanced gas turbine engines.
Ex.: Ti3Al, Ni3Al, Fe3Al
35
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Two-Phase System
Figure 2.47 (a) Schematic illustration of grains, grain boundaries, and particles
dispersed throughout the structure of a two-phase system, such as a lead-copper
alloy. The grains represent lead in solid solution in copper, and the particles are
lead as a second phase. (b) Schematic illustration of a two-phase system
consisting of two sets of grains: dark, and light. The dark and the light grains
have separate compositions and properties.
36
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Solidification begins when the temperature of the molten metal drops below
the liquidus;
It is completed when the temperature reaches the solidus.
Within this temperature range, the alloy is in a mushy or pasty state.
Nickel-Copper Alloy Phase Diagram Figure 2.49 Phase
diagram for nickel-
copper alloy system
obtained at a slow
rate of solidification.
Note that pure nickel
and pure copper each
has one freezing or
melting temperature.
The top circle on the
right depicts the
nucleation of
crystals. The second
circle shows the
formation of
dendrites (see
Section 10.2). The
bottom circle shows
the solidified alloy,
with grain
boundaries.
38
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Another example of a two phase diagram is shown in Fig. 2.50 for the lead-Tin.
Eutectic point : The point at which the liquid
solution decomposes into two phases.
Lead-Tin Phase Diagram
Figure 2.50
The lead-tin
phase diagram.
Note that the
composition of
the eutectic
point for this
alloy is 61.9%
Sn-38.1% Pb.
A composition
either lower or
higher than this
ratio will have a
higher liquidus
temperature.
39
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
1) Ferrite:
Alpha ferrite is a solid solution of body centered cubic iron; it has maximum solid
solubility of 0.022% C at a temperature of 727oC.
Delta ferrite is stable only at very high temperature and is of no practical significance
in engineering.
Ferrite is relatively soft and ductile; it is magnetic from room temperature to 768oC.
2) Austenite:
Within a certain temperature range, iron undergoes a polymorphic transformation from
the bcc to an fcc structure, becoming gamma iron or austenite .
Austenite has a solid solubility of up to 2.11% C at 1148oC. Its single phase fcc
structure is ductile at elevated temperature.
3) Cementite:
Cementite is 100% iron carbide (Fe3C) having a carbon content of 6.67%.
Cementite is a very hard and brittle intermetallic compound and has a significant
influence on the properties of steels.
41
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Pearlite Microstructure
Figure 2.54 Microstructure of
pearlite in 1080 steel, formed from
austenite of eutectoid composition.
In this lamellar structure, the lighter
regions are ferrite, and the darker
regions are carbide. Magnification:
2500X. Source: Courtesy of USX
Corporation.
43
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
45
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
46
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
47
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
4) Malleable iron
Malleable iron is obtained by annealing white cast iron in an atmosphere of carbon
monoxide and carbon dioxide, at 800o 900o C, for up to several hours.
During this process, the cementite decomposes into iron and graphite.
This structure is ductile, strength, and shock resistance.
48
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
The various microstructures described thus far can be modified by heat treatment
techniques – that is, by controlled heating and cooling of the alloys at various rates.
The treatment induce phase transformations that greatly influence such mechanical
properties as the strength, hardness, ductility, toughness, and wear resistance of the alloys.
The structures consider in the iron-carbon system are pearlite, spheroidite, bainite,
martensite, and tempered martensite. The heat treatment processes described are
annealing, quenching, and tempering.
1) Pearlite
If the ferrite and cementite lamellae in the pearlite structure of the eutectoid steel (in Fig.
2.53) are thin and closely packed, the microstructure is called fine pearlite; if they are
thick and widely spaces, it is called coarse pearlite.
If the rate of cooling is relatively high (as it is in air), fine pearlite is produced; if cooling
is slow (as it is in a furnace), coarse pearlite is produced.
49
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2) Spheroidite
When pearlite is heated just below the eutectoid temperature and then held at that
temperature for period of time such as for a day at 700o C – the cementite lamellae
transform to roughly spherical shapes (Fig. 2.57).
This structure has higher toughness and lower hardness than the pearlite structure.
50
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
3) Bainite
Bainite is a very fine microstructure consisting of ferrite and cementite.
It can be produced in steels with alloying elements and at cooling rates that higher
than those required for transformation to pearlite.
Bainitic steel generally is stronger and more ductile than pearlitic steels at the same
hardness level.
4) Martensite
When austenite is cooled at a high rate (quenching it in water), its face-centered cubic
(fcc) structure is transformed into a body-centered tetragonal (bct) structure (Fig.
2.52d).
It is extremely hard and brittle (Fig. 2.15); it lacks toughness; and therefore, it has
limited use.
51
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Martensite
(b)
52
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
5) Tempered martensite
Martensite is tempered in order to improve its mechanical properties. Tempering is a heating
process (150o 650o C) by which hardness is reduced and toughness is improved.
The body-centered tetragonal martensite is heated to an intermediate temperature (150o
650o C), where it decomposes to a two-phase microstructure consisting of body-centered cubic
alpha ferrite and small particles of cementite.
Increasing tempering time
and temperature, the hardness
of tempered martensite
decreases (Fig. 2.59).
53
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2) Quenching media
The fluid used for quenching the heated alloy also has an effect on hardenability.
Quenching commonly may be carried out in water, brine (saltwater), oils, molten
salts, or air. Caustic solutions, polymer solutions, and gases are also used.
- Water is a common medium for rapid cooling.
- Brine is an effective quenching medium. However, brine can corrode the part.
- Polymer quenchants can be used for ferrous as well as for nonferrous alloy
quenching.
The cooling rate depends on the surface area to thickness or surface area to volume
ratio of the part. The higher this ratio, the higher is the cooling rate.
55
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
57
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2.4.10. Annealing
Anneling is a general term used to describe the restoration of a cold-worked or
heat-treated alloy to its original properties.
Annealing can be used to increase ductility and reduce hardness and strength or to
modify its microstructure.
The annealing process also is used to relieve residual stresses in a manufactured
part, as well as to improve machinability and dimensional stability.
The annealing process consists of the following steps:
- Heating the workpiece to a specific range of temperature in a furnace.
- Holding it at that temperature for a period of time (soaking).
- Cooling in air or in a furnace.
An annealing temperature may be higher than the material’s recrystallization
temperature, depending on the degree of cold work.
Full annealing is a term applied to the annealing of ferrous alloys. The steel is
heated to above A1 or A3 (Fig. 2.64), and the cooling takes place slowly in a furnace.
The structure obtained through full annealing is coarse pearlite, which is soft and
ductile and has small, uniform grains.
58
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Figure 2.64 Heat-treating temperature ranges for Figure 2.65 Hardness of steels in the quenched and
plain-carbon steels, as indicated on the iron-iron normalized conditions, as a function of carbon content.
carbide phase diagram. Source: ASM International.
To avoid excessive softness from the annealing of steels, the cooling cycle may be done
completely in still air. This process is called normalizing to indicate that the part is heated
to a temperature above A3 or Acm in order to transform the structure to austenite.
Normalizing results in somewhat higher strength and hardness and in lower ductility than
does full annealing (Fig. 2.65).
Normalizing generally is carried out to refine the grain structure, obtain uniform
structure, decrease residual stresses, and improve machinability.
59
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Tempering
If steels are hardened by heat treatment, then tempering or drawing is used in order to
reduce brittleness, increase ductility and toughness, and reduce residual stresses.
The steel is heated to a specific temperature and then cooled at a prescribed rate.
The results of tempering for an oil-quenched AISI 4340 steel are shown in Fig. 2.66.
60
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
61
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Induction Heating
Figure 2.67 Types of coils used in induction heating of various surfaces of parts.
62
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
63
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
64
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
TABLE 5.2 Typical Mechanical Properties of Selected Carbon and Alloy Steels in the Hot-Rolled,
Normalized, and Annealed Condition
AISI Condition Ultimate Yield Elongation in Reduction of Hardness
tensile Strength 50 mm (%) area (%) (HB)
strength (MPa)
(MPa)
1020 As-rolled 448 346 36 59 143
Normalized 441 330 35 67 131
Annealed 393 294 36 66 111
1080 As-rolled 1010 586 12 17 293
Normalized 965 524 11 20 293
Annealed 615 375 24 45 174
3140 Normalized 891 599 19 57 262
Annealed 689 422 24 50 197
4340 Normalized 1279 861 12 36 363
Annealed 744 472 22 49 217
8620 Normalized 632 385 26 59 183
Annealed 536 357 31 62 149
65
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2) Carbon steels
Carbon steel generally are classified by their proportion (by weight) of carbon content:
Low-carbon steel: Has less than 0.3% C. It often used for common industrial products
and for machine components that do not require high strength.
Medium-carbon steel: Has 0.3 to 0.6% C. It generally is used in applications requiring
higher strength than is available in low-carbon steels.
High-carbon steel: Has more than 0.6% C. It generally is used for parts requiring
strength, hardness, and wear resistance, such as cutting tools, cable, springs, …
Carbon steels containing sulfur and phosphorus are known resulfurized carbon steels
(11xx series) and rephosphorized and resulfurized carbon steels (12xx series).
Example: 1112 steels is a resulfurized steels with a carbon content of 0.12%.
66
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
3) Alloy steels
Steels containing significant amounts of alloying elements are called alloy steels.
Structural-grade alloy steels are used mainly in the construction and transportation
industries because of their high strength. Other alloy steels are used in applications
where strength, hardness, creep and fatigue resistance, and toughness are required.
4) High-strength low-alloy steels (HSLA)
HSLA improve the strength-to-weight ratio of steels.
Designations (Table 5.3): Three categories: Structural quality (S), Low alloys (X)
and Weathering steels (W).
Although generally nonferrous metals and alloys are more expensive than ferrous
metals, they have major applications because of properties such as corrosion resistance,
high thermal and electrical conductivity, low density, and ease of fabrication .
69
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
71
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Degree of polymerization:
The degree of polymerization (DP) is the ratio of
the molecular weight of the polymer to the
molecular weight of the repeating unit.
In term of polymer processing, the higher the
DP, the higher is the polymer’s viscosity or its
resistance to flow (Fig. 2.75). Figure 2.75 Effect of molecular weight
and degree of polymerization on the
strength and viscosity of polymers. 74
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Crystallinity
Polymers are generally amorphous.
However, in some polymers, it is possible to impart some crystallinity (Fig. 2.78)
and thereby modify their characteristics.
Effects of crystallinity: The
mechanical and physical
properties of polymers are
greatly influenced by the degree
of crystallinity; as crystallinity
increases, polymers become
stiffer, harder, less ductile, more
dense, less rubbery, and more
resistant to solvent and heat .
Glass-transition temperature
Amorphous polymers do not have a specific
melting point (Tm), they undergo a distinct
change in their mechanical behaviour across a
narrow range of temperature.
The temperature at which a transition occurs
is called the glass-transition temperature (Tg),
also called the glass point or glass
temperature (Fig. 2.79). The term glass is
used in this description because glasses,
which are amorphous solids, behave in the
same manner.
78
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
(a) (b)
Figure 2.82 A variety of ceramic components. (a) High-strength alumina for high-temperature
applications. (b) Gas-turbine rotors made of silicon nitride. Source: Wesgo Div., GTE.
79
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2.8.3 Glasses
Glass has no distinct melting or freezing point, thus its behaviour is similar to
that of amorphous alloys and amorphous polymers.
2.8.4 Graphite
Although brittle, graphite has high electrical and thermal conductivity and good
resistance to thermal shock and to high temperature.
It is an important material for applications such as electrodes, heating elements,
brushes for motors, high-temperature fixtures and furnace parts, mould materials, and
seals.
80
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
2.8.5 Diamond
Diamond is a principal form of carbon with covalently structure.
It is the hardest substance known (7000 to 8000 HK).
It is brittle and begins to decompose in air at about 700oC, but it resists higher
temperatures in nonoxidizing environments.
Applications:
- Cutting tool materials;
- Abrasives in grinding wheels
- Dressing of grinding wheels;
- Dies for drawing wire less than 0.06 mm in diameter;
- Coating for cutting tools and dies.
82
Introduction to Manufacturing Engineering – Ass.Prof. N.T. Duong – HUST
Reinforced fibers
Reinforced fibers for polymer-matrix composites are glass, graphite, aramids,
and boron (Table 9.2).
A critical factor in reinforced plastics is the strength of the bond between the fiber
and the polymer matrix, because the load is transmitted through the fiber-matrix
interface.
The importance of proper bonding can be appreciated by inspecting the fracture
surfaces of reinforced plastics.
Generally, the highest stiffness and strength in reinforced plastics is obtained when
the fibers are aligned in the direction of the tension force.
The composite is then highly anisotropic.
84