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Material Science Introduction
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Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Mar 26, 2015

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Page 1: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Material Science

Introduction

Page 2: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

What are Materials?

That’s easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials,

our homes are made of materials - mostly manufactured. Glass windows, vinyl siding, metal silverware, ceramic dishes…

Most things are made from many different kinds of materials.

Page 3: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Materials Science and Engineering It all about the raw materials and

how they are processed That is why we call it materials

ENGINEERING Minor differences in Raw

materials or processing parameters can mean major changes in the performance of the final material or product

Page 4: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Materials Science and Engineering

An interdisciplinary study that combines metallurgy, physics, chemistry, and engineering to solve real-world problems with real-world materials in an acceptable societal and economical manner. (VCSU, 2006)

Page 5: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Materials Science and Engineering Materials Science

The discipline of investigating the relationships that exist between the structures and properties of materials.

Materials Engineering The discipline of designing or engineering the structure

of a material to produce a predetermined set of properties based on established structure-property correlation.

Four Major Components of Material Science and Engineering:

Structure of Materials Properties of Materials Processing of Materials Performance of Materials

Page 6: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Materials Science - Example The dramatic role of iron throughout the

ages is not really the result of it being "strong". In reality, iron has been important because we can change its properties by heating and cooling it.

The ability to change the properties and/or behavior of a material is what makes most materials useful and this is at the heart of materials science! (MSECRC,

2006)

Page 7: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

History of Materials

Man has been studying materials since before leaving the cave.

Due to lack of communication, early man spent hundreds of millennia experimenting with stone tools.

The first metal tools appeared perhaps only six thousand years ago.

Page 8: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

History of Materials

The discovery of “Iceman” in the Alps in 1991 gave significant information on early Copper age. He was carrying a copper axe.

It is dated at about 5300 years, when the first pyramids were built.

Page 9: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

History of Materials

As our knowledge of materials grows, so does the sophistication of our tools.

The more sophisticated our tools, the more sophisticated our accomplishments.

Page 10: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Remember: Materials “Drive” our Society! Ages of “Man” we survive based on the materials we control

Stone Age – naturally occurring materials Special rocks, skins, wood

Bronze Age Casting and forging

Iron Age High Temperature furnaces

Steel Age High Strength Alloys

Non-Ferrous and Polymer Age Aluminum, Titanium and Nickel (superalloys) – aerospace Silicon – Information Plastics and Composites – food preservation, housing, aerospace and

higher speeds Exotic Materials Age?

Nano-Material and bio-Materials – they are coming and then …

Page 11: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Doing Materials! Engineered Materials are a function of:

Raw Materials Elemental Control Processing History

Our Role in Engineering Materials then is to understand the application and specify the appropriate material to do the job as a function of:

Strength: yield and ultimate Ductility, flexibility Weight/density Working Environment Cost: Lifecycle expenses, Environmental impact** Economic and Environmental Factors often are

the most important when making the final decision!

Page 12: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Example of Materials Engineering Work – Hip Implant

With age or certain illnesses joints deteriorate. Particularly those with large loads (such as hip).

Adapted from Fig. 22.25, Callister 7e.

Page 13: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Example – Hip Implant Requirements

mechanical strength (many cycles)

good lubricity biocompatibility

Adapted from Fig. 22.24, Callister 7e.

Page 14: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Example – Hip Implant

Adapted from Fig. 22.24, Callister 7e.

Page 15: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Solution – Hip Implant Key Problems to

overcome: fixation agent to hold

acetabular cup cup lubrication

material femoral stem – fixing

agent (“glue”) must avoid any debris

in cup Must hold up in body

chemistry Must be strong yet

flexible

AcetabularCup and

Liner

Ball

Femoral Stem

Page 16: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Introduction

List the Major Types of MATERIALS That You Know: METALS CERAMICS POLYMERS SEMICONDUCTORS COMPOSITES ADVANCED MATERIALS

Page 17: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Kinds of Materials Metals: are materials that are normally

combinations of "metallic elements". Metals usually are good conductors of heat and electricity. Also, they are quite strong but malleable and tend to have a lustrous look when polished.

Ceramics: are generally compounds between metallic and nonmetallic elements. Typically they are insulating and resistant to high temperatures and harsh environments. (MSECRC, 2006)

Page 18: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

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Several uses of steel and pressed aluminum.

Metals

Page 19: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

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Examples of ceramic materials ranging from household to high performance combustion engines which utilize both metals and ceramics.

Ceramics

Page 20: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Kinds of Materials Polymers: (or plastics) are generally

organic compounds based upon carbon and hydrogen. They are very large molecular structures. Usually they are low density and are not stable at high temperatures.

Semiconductors: have electrical properties intermediate between metallic conductors and ceramic insulators. Also, the electrical properties are strongly dependent upon small amounts of impurities. (MSECRC, 2006)

Page 21: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

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Polymers include “Plastics” and rubber materials

Polymers

Page 22: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

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Si wafer for computer chip devices.

Semiconductors

Micro-Electrical-Mechanical Systems (MEMS)

Page 23: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Kinds of Materials

Composites: consist of more than one material type. Fiberglass, a combination of glass and a polymer, is an example. Concrete and plywood are other familiar composites. Many new combinations include ceramic fibers in metal or polymer matrix. (MSECRC, 2006)

Page 24: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

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Polymer composite materials: reinforcing glass fibers in a polymer matrix.

Composites

Page 25: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Newer Branches of Materials Science Nanotechnology: a relatively new area

grown out of techniques used to manufacture semiconductor circuits. Machines can be produced on a microscopic level. Example - miniature robots to do surgery inside the body or miniature chemical laboratories and instruments that will continuously analyze blood and dispense medications inside the body. (VCSU, 2006)

Page 26: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

NanoTech

As Hygienic as a Shark? Yes, they avoid pesky algae and bacteria by way of an ingenious skin design. Microorganisms prefer flat surfaces, which allow them to form large colonies or biofilms. But unlike most other fish, sharks don't have flat scales. Instead, they have dermal denticles—ridged, tooth-like scales covering their body (pictured here). These bumpy "teeth" create a rough surface that biofilms can't colonize or thrive on, which contributes to the shark's naturally bacteria-free status.

In the not too distant future, dozens of intriguing nanodevices such as the nanotubes above may transform cancer diagnosis, treatment, and prevention.

Page 27: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Introduction, cont. Metals

Steel, Cast Iron, Aluminum, Copper, Titanium, many others

Ceramics Glass, Concrete,

Brick, Alumina, Zirconia, SiN, SiC

Polymers Plastics, Wood,

Cotton (rayon, nylon), “glue”

Composites Glass Fiber-

reinforced polymers, Carbon Fiber-reinforced polymers, Metal Matrix Composites, etc.

Page 28: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Thoughts about these “fundamental” Materials

Metals: Strong, ductile high thermal & electrical conductivity opaque, reflective.

Polymers/plastics: Covalent bonding sharing of e’s Soft, ductile, low strength, low density thermal & electrical insulators Optically translucent or transparent.

Ceramics: ionic bonding (refractory) – compounds of metallic & non-metallic elements (oxides, carbides, nitrides, sulfides)

Brittle, glassy, elastic non-conducting (insulators)

Page 29: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

The Materials Selection Process

1. Pick Application Determine required Properties

2. Properties Identify candidate Material(s)

3. Material Identify required Processing

Processing: changes structure and overall shapeex: casting, sintering, doping, annealing.

Properties: mechanical, electrical, thermal,magnetic, optical, deteriorative.

Material: structure, composition.

Page 30: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

But: Properties depend on Structure (strength or hardness)

Har

dnes

s (B

HN

)

Cooling Rate (ºC/s)

100

200

300

400

500

600

0.01 0.1 1 10 100 1000

(d)

30 m(c)

4 m

(b)

30 m

(a)

30 m

And:

Processing can change structure! (see above structure vs Cooling

Rate)

Page 31: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Another Example: Rolling of Steel

At h1, L1

low tensile strength

low yield strength

high ductility round grains

At h2, L2

high tensile strength

high yield strength low ductility elongated grains

Structure determines Properties but Processing determines Structure!

Page 32: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Optical Properties of Ceramic are controlled by “Grain Structure”

Grain Structure is a function of “Solidification” processing!

Page 33: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Electrical Properties (of Copper):

Adapted from Fig. 18.8, Callister 7e.(Fig. 18.8 adapted from: J.O. Linde,Ann Physik 5, 219 (1932); andC.A. Wert and R.M. Thomson,Physics of Solids, 2nd edition,McGraw-Hill Company, New York,1970.)

T (°C)

-200 -100 0

Cu + 3.32 at%Ni

Cu + 2.16 at%Ni

deformed Cu + 1.12 at%Ni

1

2

3

4

5

6

Re

sist

ivity

,

(10-8

Ohm

-m)

0

Cu + 1.12 at%Ni

“Pure” Cu

Electrical Resistivity of Copper is affected by:

• Contaminate level

• Degree of deformation

• Operating temperature

Page 34: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

THERMAL Properties• Space Shuttle Tiles: --Silica fiber insulation offers low heat conduction.

• Thermal Conductivity of Copper: --It decreases when you add zinc!

Adapted fromFig. 19.4W, Callister 6e. (Courtesy of Lockheed Aerospace Ceramics Systems, Sunnyvale, CA)(Note: "W" denotes fig. is on CD-ROM.)

Adapted from Fig. 19.4, Callister 7e.(Fig. 19.4 is adapted from Metals Handbook: Properties and Selection: Nonferrous alloys and Pure Metals, Vol. 2, 9th ed., H. Baker, (Managing Editor), American Society for Metals, 1979, p. 315.)

Composition (wt% Zinc)

The

rmal

Con

duct

ivity

(W

/m-K

)

400

300

200

100

00 10 20 30 40

100 m

Page 35: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

MAGNETIC Properties

• Magnetic Permeability vs. Composition: --Adding 3 atomic % Si makes Fe a

better recording medium!

Adapted from C.R. Barrett, W.D. Nix, andA.S. Tetelman, The Principles ofEngineering Materials, Fig. 1-7(a), p. 9,1973. Electronically reproducedby permission of Pearson Education, Inc.,Upper Saddle River, New Jersey.

Fig. 20.23, Callister 7e.(Fig. 20.23 is from J.U. Lemke, MRS Bulletin,Vol. XV, No. 3, p. 31, 1990.)

• Magnetic Storage: --Recording medium is magnetized by recording head.

Magnetic FieldM

ag

net

iza

tion Fe+3%Si

Fe

Page 36: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

DETERIORATIVE Properties

• Stress & Saltwater... --causes cracks!

Adapted from chapter-opening photograph, Chapter 17, Callister 7e.(from Marine Corrosion, Causes, and Prevention, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 1975.)

4 m--material: 7150-T651 Al "alloy" (Zn,Cu,Mg,Zr)Adapted from Fig. 11.26,Callister 7e. (Fig. 11.26 provided courtesy of G.H.Narayanan and A.G. Miller, Boeing CommercialAirplane Company.)

• Heat treatment: slows crack speed in salt water!

Adapted from Fig. 11.20(b), R.W. Hertzberg, "Deformation and Fracture Mechanics of Engineering Materials" (4th ed.), p. 505, John Wiley and Sons, 1996. (Original source: Markus O. Speidel, Brown Boveri Co.)

“held at 160ºC for 1 hr before testing”

increasing loadcra

ck s

pe

ed

(m

/s)

“as-is”

10-10

10-8

Alloy 7178 tested in saturated aqueous NaCl solution at 23ºC

Page 37: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

• Using the right material for the job.one that is most economical and

“Greenest” when life usage is considered

• Understanding the relation between properties, structure, and processing.

• Recognizing new design opportunities offered by materials selection.

Goal is to make you aware of the importance of Material Selection by:

Page 38: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Future of Material Science

38

Design of materials having specific desired characteristics directly from our knowledge of atomic structure.

•Miniaturization: “Nanostructured" materials, with microstructure that has length scales between 1 and 100 nanometers with unusual properties. Electronic components, materials for quantum computing.

• Smart materials: airplane wings that deice or move themselves, buildings that stabilize themselves in earthquakes…

Page 39: Material Science Introduction. What are Materials? Thats easy! Look around. Our clothes are made of materials, our homes are made of materials - mostly.

Future of Material Science• Environment-friendly materials: biodegradable or

photodegradable plastics, advances in nuclear waste processing, etc.

• Learning from Nature: shells and biological hard tissue can be as strong as the most advanced laboratory-produced ceramics, mollusks produce biocompatible adhesives that we do not know how to reproduce…

• Materials for lightweight batteries with high storage densities, for turbine blades that can operate at 2500°C, room-temperature superconductors? chemical sensors (artificial nose) of extremely high sensitivity, cotton shirts that never require ironing…