Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering: William F. Smith Javad Hashemi
Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering: William F. Smith Javad Hashemi
Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering: William F. Smith Javad Hashemi
Foundations of Materials
Science
and
Engineering
Fifth Edition
William F. Smith
Javad Hashemi
1 Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering, 5th Edn. Smith and Hashemi
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display
CHAPTER
1
Introduction to
Materials Science
and
Engineering
3 Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering, 5th Edn. Smith and Hashemi
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display
• Examples :-
Silicon and Iron constitute 27.72 and
5.00 percentage of weight of earths
crust respectively.
Nitrogen and Oxygen constitute 78.08
and 20.95 percentage of dry air by
volume respectively.
4
Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering, 5th Edn. Smith and Hashemi
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display
5 Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering, 5th Edn. Smith and Hashemi
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display
6 Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering, 5th Edn. Smith and Hashemi
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display
Types of Materials
• Metallic Materials
Composed of one or more metallic elements.
Example:- Iron, Copper, Aluminum.
Metallic element may combine with
nonmetallic elements.
Example:- Silicon Carbide, Iron Oxide.
Inorganic and have crystalline structure.
Good thermal and electric conductors.
Ferrous Nonferrous
Eg: Steel, Eg:Copper
Cast Iron Aluminum
7 Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering, 5th Edn. Smith and Hashemi
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display
Types of Materials
8 Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering, 5th Edn. Smith and Hashemi
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display
Types of Materials
• Ceramic Materials
Metallic and nonmetallic elements are chemically bonded
together.
Inorganic but can be either crystalline, noncrystalline or
mixture of both.
High hardness, strength and wear resistance.
Very good insulator. Hence used for furnace lining for heat
treating and melting metals.
Also used in space shuttle to insulate it during exit and reentry
into atmosphere.
Other applications : Abrasives, construction materials, utensils
etc.
9 Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering, 5th Edn. Smith and Hashemi
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display
Types of Materials
• Composite Materials
Mixture of two or more materials.
Consists of a filler material and a binding material.
Materials only bond, will not dissolve in each other.
Mainly two types :-
o Fibrous: Fibers in a matrix
o Particulate: Particles in a matrix
o Matrix can be metals, ceramic or polymer
Examples :-
Fiber Glass ( Reinforcing material in a polyester or epoxy
matrix)
Concrete ( Gravels or
steel rods reinforced in
cement and sand)
Applications:- Aircraft wings
and engine, construction.
10 Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering, 5th Edn. Smith and Hashemi
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display
Types of Materials
• Electronic Materials
11 Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering, 5th Edn. Smith and Hashemi
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display
lb/Car
depending on cost and 800
performance.
600
• New, cheaper or better 400
materials replace the old 200
materials when there is a 0
breakthrough in technology 1985 1992 1997
Model Year
• Smart Materials
React to environment Stimuli.
Change their properties by sensing external stimulus.
Examples: Shape memory alloys – used in the artery stents.
Microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) devices.
13 Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering, 5th Edn. Smith and Hashemi
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display
• Nanomaterials
Smaller than 100 nm particle size.
Materials have special properties.
Very hard and strong characteristics.
Research in progress.
Example: Carbon nanofiber reinforced plastic:
very light but stronger than metals.
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/
www.ml.afrl.af.mil/stories/mlb-00378.html
14 Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering, 5th Edn. Smith and Hashemi
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display
Low cost but Light and Very light and Light, moderately Slightly better
Heavy. Less strong. But strong. No Strong. Corrosion Than Al
Corrosion Cannot be corrosion. Resistance. alloys. But much
resistance shaped Very expensive expensive expensive