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Ch2 & 3 Review

This document summarizes key concepts from chapters 2 and 3 regarding atomic arrangements in metals, crystalline structure deformation through slip and twinning, calculation of slip systems, and the differences between crystalline and non-crystalline structures. It also covers grains and grain boundaries, recovery, recrystallization and grain growth, stress-strain curves, and true stress-strain relationships.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
62 views42 pages

Ch2 & 3 Review

This document summarizes key concepts from chapters 2 and 3 regarding atomic arrangements in metals, crystalline structure deformation through slip and twinning, calculation of slip systems, and the differences between crystalline and non-crystalline structures. It also covers grains and grain boundaries, recovery, recrystallization and grain growth, stress-strain curves, and true stress-strain relationships.

Uploaded by

Anson Chan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 42

Review of Chapter 2 and Chapter 3

1
• 3 basic atomic arrangements in metals:
– Body-Centered Cubic (BCC)
Models shown are known as hard-ball or hard-sphere
models

Single crystal with


Hard-ball model Unit cell
many unit cells
BCC Structure

• a ~ 0.1 nm
1
• Number of atoms in BCC: 1 + 8 × = 2
8
2
– Face-Centered Cubic (FCC)

Single crystal with


Hard-ball model Unit cell
many unit cells

FCC Structure

1 1
• Number of atoms in FCC: 6 × + 8 × = 4
2 8

3
– Hexagonal Close-Packed (HCP)

Unit cell Single crystal with many


unit cells

HCP Structure

1 1
• Number of atoms in HCP: 3 + 12 × + 2 × = 6
6 2

4
• Crystalline structure deformation
– Crystalline structure may deform (slip) under stress

• Elastic deformation: When a single


crystal is subjected to an external force,
it returns to its original shape when the
force is removed

• Plastic deformation (or permanent


deformation): When force increased, the
crystal does not return to its original
shape when the force is removed

5
• Slip system calculation
-- Miller indices for directions: [u v w]

Z ▪ Three important set of directions


[011] related to the cube are:
[001] (i) cell edge ([001] type),
(ii) face diagonal ([011] type),
(iii) body diagonal ([111] type).

[101]
[010] Body diagonal
Y
[100]
[111]
[110]
X [110]

6
• Slip system calculation (cont.)
-- Miller indices for planes: (h k l)

o Find intercepts along axes → 2 3 1 (transitional motion can be applied)


o Take reciprocal → 1/2 1/3 1
o Convert to smallest integers in the same ratio → 3 2 6
o Enclose in parenthesis → (326)

Note: (326) does NOT represent one plane but an infinite set of parallel
planes passing through lattice points. 7
Slip System
-- Combination of a slip plane and its direction of slip is known as
a slip system
-- Metals with 5 or more slip systems are ductile
-- Crystalline structure slip system example – FCC

➢ Slip planes – highest planar density

➢ Slip directions – highest linear density

4 𝑝𝑙𝑎𝑛𝑒𝑠 𝑤𝑖𝑡ℎ 𝑑𝑖𝑎𝑔𝑜𝑛𝑎𝑙 𝑛𝑜𝑚𝑎𝑙


×
3 𝑒𝑑𝑔𝑒𝑠
= 12

8
• Non-crystalline (Amorphous) structure
– A comparison
• Crystalline structure: regular, repeating and densely packed
• Non-crystalline structure: random and loosely packed

Crystalline Non-crystalline

– Although many non-crystalline materials are liquid and


gas, there are solid non-crystalline materials such as glass,
some plastics and rubber

9
• Non-crystalline structure (cont.)
– Materials may change its structure under different
temperature

Organized structure
with lower energy

Glass-transition temperature

Melting temperature

10
• Grains and grain boundaries
– A mass of crystals form a grain in the process of solidification.
– Materials are usually made of many randomly oriented grains
– Surfaces that separate individual grains are called grain
boundaries

11
• Grains and grain boundaries (cont.)
– The formation of the grains

• When molten metal solidify, crystals begin to form at various


locations and have random orientations
• These crystals then grows into a crystalline structure or grain
• Number and size of the grains depends on the rate at which
nucleation takes place
• Surfaces that separate individual grains are called grain
boundaries
12
• Grains and grain boundaries (cont.)
– Grain size:
Example: Assume that the ball of a
ballpoint pen is 1 mm in diameter and has
an ASTM grain size of 10. Calculate the
number of grains in the ball.

Solution:

oThe volume of the 1-mm-diameter ball is


4r 3 4 (0.5)
3
V= = = 0.5236 mm 3
3 3
oTotal number of grains is
( )
N = (0.5236) 520,000 grains/mm3 = 272,300

13
-- Recovery, Recrystallization, and Grain Growth
• 3 events take place consecuti-
vely during the heating process:
1. Recovery:
Occurs below recrystallization
temperature, stresses in the highly
deformed regions are relieved
2. Recrystallization:
Within a certain temperature range,
new equiaxed and strain-free grains
are formed to replace older grains
3. Grain growth:
Grains begin to grow in size and
exceed the original grain size when
temperature is raised further
14
– The process of stress-strain testing

Plastic deformation Necking

Breaking

Stress (se)

Elastic
deformation

Strain (e)

15
– Stress calculation
• The formula
F
se =
A0
• Note:
– se = engineering stress, MPa
– F = applied force, N
– A0 = original area of the specimen, in2 or mm2

– Strain calculation
• The formula:
L − L0
e=
L0
• Note: it has no unit
– True strain-stress
• Engineering stress is based on the original cross-sectional
area, Ao, of the specimen
• Engineering stress does not represent the actual stress and
hence, we need true stress
• True stress
F
s=
A Actual (instantaneous) area
• True strain
L dL L
e = = ln
L L
0 L0

• The correlation between the engineering stress-strain and


true stress-strain
s = se(1 + e)
e = ln(1 + e)

17
– True stress – true strain (cont.)
• Illustration: with the true stress and true strain, it is seen that the
material becomes stronger as it is strained

fracture
s True strain

UTS Engineering
strain
Y Plastic deformation
zone
Elastic
deformation zone
e

• Area under true stress–true strain curve is called specific energy


• Area under true stress–true strain curve up to fracture is known
as the toughness
18
– The true stress – true strain relationship can be described
by the flow curve equation:
s = Ke n
where, K is the strength coefficient or flow strength (MPa) and is
equal to the true stress at a true strain of unity, and n is the strain
hardening exponent and is equal to the true strain at the onset of
necking.

– The log form:


logs = logK + nloge
– Note that n is the slope
• n is between 0 and 1
• n = 0 → perfect plastic
• n = 1 → perfect elastic
19
– Calculation of 𝑛
• Necking – stress instability:
0 = 𝑑𝐹𝑛 = 𝑑 𝜎𝑛 𝐴𝑛 = 𝐴𝑛 𝑑𝜎𝑛 + 𝜎𝑛 𝑑𝐴𝑛

• Volume conservation of material:


0 = 𝑑𝑉 = 𝐴𝑑𝐿 + 𝐿𝑑𝐴

𝑑𝜎𝑛 𝑑𝐴𝑛
⇒ =− = 𝑑𝜀𝑛
𝜎𝑛 𝐴𝑛

𝑑𝜎𝑛
⇒ = 𝜎𝑛
𝑑𝜀𝑛

𝑑𝜎𝑛 𝑛−1
= 𝐾𝑛𝜀𝑛 = 𝐾𝜀𝑛𝑛 ⇒ 𝑛 = 𝜀𝑛
𝑑𝜀𝑛 20
• Bauschinger effect
‒ When a metal is subjected to tension into the plastic range, the
yield stress in compression is lower than that in tension

21
• Compression test
– How to test the compression stress-strain
– The formula
F
se =
A0

h − h0
e=
h0

– A comparison to tensile stress-strain: much more load is


required in the plastic region because:
• The size increases
• The friction increases (barreling effect)

22
• Shearing test setup – torsion test
• Stress and strain
T
t=
2R 2t
R
g =
L

• Typical shear curves


• The relationship in the
elastic region

t = Gg

Isotropic materials:
G = E/(2+2v)
23
• Bending and testing of brittle materials
• The setup

• The transverse rupture strength


𝐹𝐿
𝑀𝑡 𝑡 3𝐹𝐿
𝑇𝑅𝑆 = = 2 2 =
2𝐼 2𝑏𝑡 3 /12 2𝑏𝑡 2
where, TRS = transverse rupture strength (MPa), F = applied force
(N), L = length of the specimen between supports (mm); and b and t
are the dimensions of the cross section (mm).
24
– Hardness test example: Brinell test
• Use a carbide ball of 10 mm diameter to press the surface
of a specimen
• The applied force P is 500, 1,500 or 3,000 kg.
• The formula to compute the HB value:
2𝑃
𝐻𝐵 =
𝜋𝐷 𝐷 − 𝐷2 − 𝑑 2 The area of a spherical cap

• An empirical relationship with the ultimate tensile stress for


steel:
UTS (N / mm2) = 3.5 HB (N / mm2)

Indentation must be fully


developed in the test

There is no direct mathematics transformation


among different hardness scales 25
• Fluid viscosity
– Definition: the resistance to flow
– Measuring the viscosity
t
Viscosity  =
F g
Shear stress t =
A

dv
Rate of shear g =
dy

26
• Physical Property 2: Thermal Properties
– Specific heat (C): the quantity of heat energy required to
increase the temperature of a unit mass of the material by 1
degree
– Thermal conductivity (k): the capability to transfer heat
𝑇2 − 𝑇1
𝑞 = −𝑘 − 𝑠𝑖𝑚𝑝𝑙𝑖𝑓𝑖𝑒𝑑 1𝐷
𝑥2 − 𝑥1

𝒒 = −𝑘𝜵𝑇 − 𝑔𝑒𝑛𝑒𝑟𝑎𝑙

27
• Physical Property 3: Electrical Properties
– Resistivity:
• How to compute the resistance:
L
R=
A
where, L is the length, A is the area, and  is the resistivity of the
material.
• Resistivity is a measure of conductivity

– The electric conductivity:


• The formula
𝐽: magnitude of current density
𝐽 1
=
𝐸 𝜌 𝐸: magnitude of electric field
28
Note that the unit is (-m)-1.
– Structure of Alloys
• An alloy is composed of two or more chemical elements,
at least one of which is a metal
• To describe alloys we have solute and solvent
• Solute is the minor element that is added to the solvent,
which is the major element

Substitutional solid solution Interstitial solid solution

• No chemical reaction between components 29


• Phase diagram
– A phase diagram is a graphic representation of a metal
alloy system as a function of composition and temperature
– An example: copper and nickel alloy phase system

weight %

30
– Review of phase diagram
• Globally – materials under stable conditions

Material compositions at
fixed temperature and
element combination

Iron–iron-carbide (Fe-C) phase diagram


31
– Review of phase diagram (cont.)
• Locally – dynamic analysis for one element combination

3% Fe-C constituent
change as
temperature varies

Only several material


formats exist

Fe-C phase diagram 32


– Review of phase diagram (cont.)
• Calculate material composition – lever rule

Step 1:
Find material formats

Step 2:
Lever rule
γ% = y/(x+y)

x y Fe3C% = x/(x+y)

*Derivation:
3%=γ% *(3%-x)+(1-γ%) *(3%+y)

=> γ%=y/(x+y)

33
• Three types of heat treatment:
– Quenching: rapid cooling to increase hardness
– Annealing: heating, holding and slow cooling to
restore original properties, increase ductility, reduce
harness and strength at crystal level
– Tempering: similar to annealing, focuses at
microstructure level (martensite to tempered martensite)

Quenching Annealing Tempering

34
– A comparison: quenching, annealing and tempering

Annealing

Tempering

Quenching

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TcrQ1__fYU0
35
• Composites (cont.)
– Rule of Mixtures
𝑐: composite
Density calculation: 𝑚: matrix
𝑚𝑐 = 𝑚𝑚 + 𝑚𝑟 𝑟: reinforcement
𝑣: void
𝑉𝑐 = 𝑉𝑚 + 𝑉𝑟 + 𝑉𝑣

𝑚𝑐 𝑚𝑚 + 𝑚𝑟 𝜌𝑚 𝑉𝑚 + 𝜌𝑟 𝑉𝑟
𝜌𝑐 = = = = 𝑓𝑚 𝜌𝑚 + 𝑓𝑟 𝜌𝑟
𝑉𝑐 𝑉𝑐 𝑉𝑐

36
• Composites (cont.)
– Rule of Mixtures
➢ Longitudinal elastic modulus: ➢ Transverse elastic modulus:

h h
sc sc
sc sc

tm/2 tm/2
tf tf
tm/2 tm/2
tc tc

Uniform strain because of perfect bound assumption. Uniform strain because of perfect bound assumption.

Parallel model) for longitudinal modulus: Series model for transverse modulus:
𝐸𝑐1 = 𝑉𝑟 𝐸𝑟1 + 𝑉𝑚 𝐸𝑚 𝐸𝑟2 𝐸𝑚
𝐸𝑐2 =
𝐸𝑟1 , 𝐸𝑚 = longitudinal fiber and matrix moduli 𝑉𝑟 𝐸𝑚 + 𝑉𝑚 𝐸𝑟2

𝐸𝑟2 , 𝐸𝑚 = transverse fiber and matrix moduli


37
Example 1.1
A tensile test specimen has a starting gage length = 50 mm and a
cross-section area = 200 mm2, the specimen yield under a load of
32,000 N (0.2% offset) at a gage length = 50.2 mm. The maximum
load of 65,000 is reached at a gage length of 57.7 mm just before
necking. Final fracture occurs at a gage length of 63.5 mm.
Determine (a) yield strength, (b) modulus of elasticity, (c) tensile
strength, (d) engineering strain at maximum load, and (e) percent
elongation
(a) Yield strength Y = 32,000 N / 200 mm2 = 160 MPa
(b) Engineering strain e = (50.2 mm – 50 mm) / 50 mm x
100% – 0.2% = 0.2% => Modulus = 160 MPa / 0.002 =
80 GPa
(c) Tensile strength TS = 65,000 N / 200 mm2 = 325 MPa
(d) Engineering strain e = (57.7 mm – 50 mm) / 50 mm x
100% = 15.4%
(e) Percent elongation EL = (63.5 mm – 50 mm) / 50 mm x
100% = 27% 38
Example 1.2
Set up in 1.1, determine (a) true stress and (b) true strain at
maximum load.
(a) Volume conservation to find cross-section area at maximum
load A = A0L0/L = 200 mm2 x 50 mm / 57.7 mm = 173.3 mm2
=> true stress σ = 65,000 N / 173.3 mm2 = 375 MPa
(b) Ture strain ε = ln (L/L0) = 0.143

Check:
(a) True stress σ = 375 MPa = TS x (1 + e) = 325 MPa x (1 +
15.4%)
(b) True strain ε = 0.143 = ln (1 + e) = ln (1 + 15.4%)

39
Example 2: Calculation of Ultimate Tensile Strength
• Assume that a material has a true stress–true strain curve given by
s = 690 e 0.5 psi
Calculate the true ultimate tensile strength and the engineering UTS
of this material Metric and Imperial units, metric one
will be used in assignments and exams
• The necking strain for this material is e = n = 0.5

• True ultimate tensile strength is s = Knn = 690(0.5)0.5 = 488 psi

• The true area at the onset of necking is obtained from


𝐴0
ln = 𝑛 = 0.5 ⇒ 𝐴𝑛𝑒𝑐𝑘 = 𝐴0 𝒆−0.5 ⇒ 𝑃 = 𝜎𝐴𝑛𝑒𝑐𝑘 = 𝜎𝐴0 𝒆−0.5
𝐴𝑛𝑒𝑐𝑘

Hence,
P = (488)(0.606)( A0 ) = 295.7 A0 lb (2900 A0 kg)
P
UTS = = 296 psi MPa 40
A0
Example 3.1

Analyze compositions of the liquid and solid phases in the copper-nickel


alloy system with 50 wt% nickel and a temperature of 1260 °C:
Use the horizontal line at 1260 °C to identify liquid and solid phases
composition. The liquid phase has 36 wt% nickel and the solid phase has 62
wt% of nickel.
41
Example 3.2

Analyze the proportion of liquid and solid phases in the copper-nickel alloy
system with 50 wt% nickel and a temperature of 1260 °C:
Use lever rule:
% liquid = (62 – 50) / (62 – 36) x 100% = 46 %
% solid = (50-36) / (62 – 36) x 100% = 54 %
42

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