Mangalore Institute of Technology and Engineering: Material Science and Metallurgy
Mangalore Institute of Technology and Engineering: Material Science and Metallurgy
Smart Material
CREDITS – 04
Course objectives:
To understand the fundamentals of materials, structures and
its related mechanical properties
To understand the concepts of deformation, Fracture, Creep
and Fatigue under different loading conditions
To impart knowledge on different solidification mechanism
and thereby construct the different types of phase diagram
To familiarize the concept of Iron Carbon equilibrium
diagram and study the microstructure for various kinds of
heat treatment and classify Ferrous Nonferrous and
Composite materials
Course outcome
To understand the fundamentals of materials, structures and
its related mechanical properties
To understand the concepts of deformation, Fracture, Creep
and Fatigue under different loading conditions
To impart knowledge on different solidification mechanism
and thereby construct the different types of phase diagram
To familiarize the concept of Iron Carbon equilibrium
diagram and study the microstructure for various kinds of
heat treatment and classify Ferrous Nonferrous and
Composite materials
7 10/13/2019
Module -1
Crystal Structure
BCC, FCC and HCP Structures, coordination number and
atomic packing factors, crystal imperfections -point line and
surface imperfections. Atomic Diffusion: Phenomenon, Ficks
laws of diffusion, factors affecting diffusion.
Mechanical Behaviour
Stress-strain diagram for ductile and brittle materials,
mechanical properties in plastic range, yield strength offset
yield strength, ductility, ultimate tensile strength, toughness.
10 Hours
Module -2
Plastic deformation: of single crystal by slip and twinning.
Fracture: Types, Griffith’s criterion of brittle fracture,
Creep: Description of Creep phenomenon with examples.
three stages of creep, creep properties, stress relaxation.
Fatigue: Types of fatigue loading with examples,
Mechanism of fatigue, fatigue properties, fatigue testing and S-
N diagram.
10 Hours
Module -3
Solidification
Mechanism of solidification, Homogenous and
Heterogeneous nucleation, crystal growth, cast metal
structures. Phase Diagram I: Solid solutions Hume Rothary
rule substitution, and interstitial solid solutions,
intermediate phases, Gibbs phase rule.
Phase Diagram II
Construction of equilibrium diagrams involving complete
and partial solubility, lever rule. Different types invariant
reactions – Eutectic, Eutectoid, Peritectic, Peritectectoid
reactions etc.
10 Hours
Module -4
Iron carbon equilibrium diagram
Description of phases, solidification of steels and cast irons,
invariant reactions.
10 Hours
Module -5
Ferrous and non ferrous materials
Properties, Composition and uses of
• Grey cast iron, malleable iron, SG iron and steel
• Copper alloys-brasses and bronzes.Aluminum alloys-Al-
Cu,Al-Si,Al-Zn alloys.Titanium alloys
Composite Materials
Definition, classification, types of matrix materials &
reinforcements, fundamentals of production of FRP's and
MMC's advantages and application of composites.
Question paper pattern:
Text Books:
1. Foundations of Materials Science and Engineering, Smith, 4th Edition McGraw
Hill,
2009
2. Materials Science, Shackleford., & M. K. Muralidhara, Pearson Publication –
2007.
Reference Books:
1. An Introduction to Metallurgy; Alan Cottrell, Universities Press India
OrientalLongman Pvt. Ltd., 1974.
2. Engineering Materials Science, W.C.Richards, PHI, 1965
3. Physical Metallurgy; Lakhtin, Mir Publications
4. Materials Science and Engineering, V.Raghavan , PHI, 2002
5. Elements of Materials Science and Engineering, H. VanVlack, Addison-
WesleyEdn., 1998
6. Materials Science and Engineering,William D. Callister Jr., John Wiley & Sons.
Inc,5th Edition, 2001.
7. The Science and Engineering of Materials, Donald R. Askland and
Pradeep.P.Phule, Cengage Learning, 4lh Ed., 2003.
Module -1
constitute of thing
They have short range order but no long range order are
termed as aggregates
Unit cell
A number of crystals come together to form a crystalline solid
and each of these crystals in turn contains a number of repetitive
blocks called Unit cells.
Simple cubic
BCC
FCC
HCP
Space Lattice
The three dimensional pattern where the atoms arranged
themselves in an orderly manner along various directions is
known as Space lattice.
A distribution of atoms in three dimensions such that, the
number of atoms, their location and their particular arrangement
in a unit cell is known as space lattice.
Cubic Space lattices
Crystal Systems
The unit vectors a, b and c are called lattice parameters.
Based on their length equality or inequality and their orientation
(the angles between them α,β,Ƴ) a total of 7crystal systems can
be defined.
With the centering (face,base and body centering) added to these,
14 kinds of 3D lattices, known as Bravais lattices, can be
generated.
Coordination number
The number of nearest and equidistant neighbouring atoms
that each atom has in a space lattice.
Eg: SC-6, BCC-8, FCC-12
Metallic Crystal Structures
Faced-centered cubic (FCC)
Body-centered cubic (BCC)
Hexagonal close-packed (HCP).
Atomic packing factor
It is the ratio of volume of atom contained in each unit cell to
volume of unit cell itself
APF=
Calculation for some unit cell
Simple cubic
Face cantered cubic
Body cantered cubic
HEXAGONAL CLOSE PACKED(c=1.633a)
Crystal Imperfections(Defects)
Defects exists any all solid materials. For ease of their
characterization, defects are classified on the basis of their
geometry, which is realistic as defects are disrupted region in a
volume of a solid.
Defects are:
a. Point defects (zero-dimensional)
b. Line defects (single dimensional)
c. Surface defects (two dimensional)
d. Volume defects (three dimensional)
VACANCY
Vacancy
A vacancy is a vacant lattice position from where the atom is
missing.
It is usually created when the solid is formed by cooling the
liquid. There are other ways of making a vacancy, but they also
occur naturally as a result of thermal excitation, and these are
thermodynamically stable at temperatures greater than zero.
Interstitial Imperfections
Interstitialcy
An interstitial atom or interstitialcy is an atom that
occupies a place outside the normal lattice position. It may be the
same type of atom as the rest surrounding it (self interstitial) or
a foreign impurity atom.
Interstitialcy is most probable if the atomic packing factor is
low.
Another way an impurity atom can be fitted into a crystal
lattice is by substitution. A substitutional atom is a foreign atom
occupying original lattice position by displacing the parent atom.
Frenkel defect and Schottky defect
When an ion displaced from a regular position to an interstitial
position creating a vacancy, the pair of vacancy-interstitial is called
Frenkel defect.
A pair of one cation and one anion can be missing from an ionic
crystal, without violating the condition of charge neutrality when
the valency of ions is equal. The pair of vacant sites, thus formed, is
called Schottky defect.
This type of point defect is dominant in alkali halides. These
ion-pair vacancies, like single vacancies, facilitate atomic diffusion.
SUBSTITUTIONAL IMPURITIES
Electronic defect
Line defects(Dislocations)
Edge dislocation
Screw dislocation
Edge dislocation
Grain Boundaries
1) Grain Boundaries
2) Tilt Boundary
3) Twin Boundaries
4) Stacking Faults
Atomic Diffusion
The migration of atoms from their original lattice sites
in a crystal structure to other sites is known as Diffusion.
•Low
resilience-
Good damping
•High
resilience- Low
internal heat
generation
End of elastic region
Mechanical Properties in Plastic Region
Yield Point Phenomenon
1.Yield strength
2) Offset Yield Strength (Proof Strength)
3) DUCTILITY
It is the ability of the materials to undergo plastic
deformation under tensile load.
It is a property of a material by which it can be drawn into
thin wires.
Eg: Copper, Alluminium
% Elongation= (L-Lo)/Lo*100
4) Malleability
It is the ability of the materials to undergo plastic
deformation under compressive load.
It is a property of a material by which it can be flattened
into thin sheets without cracking.
Eg: Lead
5.Ultimate tensile strength
6. Fracture strength
Toughness
It is the resistance offered by the materials to undergo
elastic and plastic deformation.
True stress and True strain
True stress is the ratio of load and instantaneous cross-
sectional area.
σ’ = P/A’
where σ’= true stress
P = Load
A’= Instantaneous c/s area
True Strain
It is the ratio of change in length to the immediately
previous length of the specimen rather than the original length.
Engineering and True Stress-Strain
curves
PLASTIC DEFORMATION OF SINGLE
CRYSTAL
Plastic deformation by Slip
Plastic deformation by Twinning
Combination of both
Plastic deformation of single crystal
by slip and twinning
What is elastic deformation....?
material
direction
ex(111)plane in fcc
For given set of slip system slip occur on that system where
146
Critical Resolved Shear Stress(CRSS)
Critical Resolved Shear Stress(CRSS)
Plastic deformation by Twinning
Slip and Twinning
Slip and Twinning
Difference between slip and twinning
Slip Twinning
Strain Hardening (Work Hardening)
Fracture
Fracture is the separation or fragmentation of solid body into
During the fracture atomic bonds are broken and new surface
are formed
Types of fracture
1. Ductile or type I fracture
of tensile load.
Tendency of brittle fracture
1. Decreasing temp
3. tri-axial stress.
Intergranular fracture:-in this the crack propagate along the
3.Fracture
When critical size is reached the crack propagates . The area supporting
load gets reduced thus increasing stress and fracture occur
Mechanisms of fatigue failure
a)woods theory
b)Orowans Polycrystalline Model theory
Fatigue testing by R R MOORE
Reversed bending machine
S-N Diagram
Fatigue properties
1).Fatigue life(N):- it is the total no of cycle required to bring
about final fracture in a specimen at given stress.