MT 201BIntroduction
MT 201BIntroduction
MT 201BIntroduction
Materials Science
Dr. B.S.S. Daniel
MMED, IITR
s4danfmt@iitr.ernet.in
1
MT201B Materials Science
Course Objective...
Introduce fundamental concepts in Materials Science
You will learn about:
• material structure
• 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 Outline: Available in course website
z Introduction to Materials (0.5 Week) z Strengthening mechanism (1.0 Week; Tut Sheet 6)
z Crystallography (1.5 Weeks; Tut Sheet 1 & 2) z Solid solution
z Crystal structure z strain hardening
z Bravais lattice z precipitation hardening
z FCC, BCC, HCP
z Hall-Petch
z Miller Indices
z Indexing of planes and direction z Failure (1.0 Week; Tut Sheet 7)
z Bragg’s law – determination of crystal z Fracture
structure z Fatigue
z Imperfection in crystals (1.0 Week; Tut Sheet 3)
z Creep
z Point defects – solid solutions
z Line defects z Heat Treatment (1.0 Week; Tut Sheet 8)
z Volume defects z Isothermal transformation
z Mechanical properties of materials (1.0 Week; Tut z CCT
Sheet 4)
z TTT
z Elastic deformation
z Plastic deformation z Annealing
z Phase Diagram (1.5 Week; Tut Sheet 5) z Normalizing
z Gibbs Phase rule z Important Engineering Alloys (2.0 Weeks; Tut Sheet
z Binary phase diagram 9 & 10)
z Isomorphous, Eutectic, Eutectoid, z Ferrous
z Peritectic, Peritectoid
z Non-ferrous
z Lever Rule
z Phase Diagram z Ceramics
z Fe-Fe3C diagram – different alloys z Polymers
z Composites
z Materials Selection and Design (1.5 Weeks) 3
z Case studies of interest to discipline
Resource Material
Text book:
• Materials Science and Engineering: An Introduction
W.D. Callister, Jr., 7th edition, John Wiley and Sons,
Inc. (2007). http://www.wiley.com/college/callister
Additional Books:
• Materials Science and Engineers: A first course, V.
Raghavan, 5th edition, PHI (2003) – Rs. 225
•The Science and Engineering of Materials, Donald R.
Askeland, Thomson Books/Cole, (2003).
• Introduction to Materials Science for Engineers, James F.
Shackelford, Macmillan Publishing Company, (2004)
• Engineering Materials, part 1 & 2, M.F. Ashby, D.R.H.
Jones, Butterworth-Heinemann (2005)
•Structure and Properties of Engineering Materials, V.S.R. 4
Materials
drive our
society:
Stone Age
Bronze Age
Iron Age
What Now?
Silicon
Age?
Polymer
Age? 7
Some definitions …
z What is Materials Science?
Æ Understanding the relationship between stucture and
properies
z What is Materials Engineering?
Æ Designing the structure to produce a predetermined set
of properties
Main problem:
Selecting the right material from the many
thousands that are available
9
Carbonated beverage containers
Constraints:
• provide a barrier to the passage of carbon
dioxide, which is under pressure in the container
ceramic (glass) • be nontoxic, unreactive with the beverage, and,
preferably be recyclabe
• be relatively strong, and capable of surviving a
drop from a height of several meters when
containing the beverage
polymer (plastic) • be inexpensive and the cost to fabricate the final
shape should be relatively low
• if optically transparent, retain its optical clarity
• capable of being produced in different colors
and/or able to be adorned with decorative labels
metal (aluminum)
10
The Inter-relationships …
Engineers make things. They make them out of materials. The
materials have to support loads, to insulate or conduct heat and
electricity, etc.
Processing
method
Micro- Property
structure
11
Materials Classification
z Metals
z Ceramics
z Polymers
z Glasses
z Elastomers
z Advanced Materials
z composites
z semiconductors
z biomaterials
z smart (inteligent) materials
z nanomaterials
12
13
Functional Classification
14
Structure in different scales
15
Classes of Processes
16
Classes of Processes
17
Taxonomy of the process
kingdom
18
Taxonomy of the process
kingdom
19
Properties
Property – all materials exposed to external stimuli evoke response
Force deformation, failure
Light reflection, absorbtion
SIX CATEGORIES:
z mechanical z magnetic
z electrical z optical
z thermal z deteriorative
20
Metals
z Relatively dense
z Stiff
z Strong
z Ductile
z Resistant to fracture
z Good conductors of heat and electricity
z Not transparent to visible light
z Some of them magnetic (Fe, Co, Ni)
21
Ceramics
Compounds between metallic and nonmetallic
elements
z Relatively stiff
z Strong
z Very hard
z Extremely brittle
z Susceptible to fracture
z Insulative to heat and electricity
z Resistant to high temperature
z May be transparent,translucent or opaque 22
Polymers
z Low density
z Not as stiff and strong as metals
z May be ductile
z May be pliable (easily formed into complex
shapes)
z Unreactive in most environments
z Low conductivityofheat and electricity
z Tendency to soften and decomposed with
temperature
23
Examples of Polymers
z Polyethylen (PE)
z Nylon
z Polyvinyl chloride (PCV)
z Polycarbonate (PC)
z Polystyrene (PS|)
z Silicon rubber
24
Mechanical
Displayed when a force
is applied to a material
z Strength
z Stiffness
z Hardness
z Ductility
z Toughness
z Wear resistance
z Fatigue resistance
z Creep resistance
25
26
C
t% Ni
(10-8 Ohm-m)
28
Thermal
Thermal Conductivity of Copper:
- It decreases when you add zinc!
400
Thermal Conductivity
300
(W/m-K)
200
100
0
0 10 20 30 40
Composition (wt% Zinc)
30
Magnetic
Magnetic Storage:
- Recording medium
is magnetized by
recording head.
Fe+3%Si
Magnetization
Fe
polycrystal: polycrystal:
single crystal low porosity high porosity
32
Deteriorative
• Stress & Saltwater... • Heat treatment: slows
--causes cracks! crack speed in salt water!
10 -8 “as-is”
“held at
increasing load
36
• Properties depend on structure
ex: hardness vs structure of steel (d)
600
Hardness (BHN)
30 μm
500 (c)
400 (b)
(a)
4 μm
300
30 μm
200 30 μm
100
0.01 0.1 1 10 100 1000
Cooling Rate (ºC/s)
• Processing can change structure
ex: structure vs cooling rate of steel 37