Materials and Processes
Materials and Processes
Properties of Metal
• Strength – the ability of a material to resist
stress or deformation
– Strength – High
– Weight – Low
– Reliability - High
Properties of Metal
• Other properties
– Crystalline structure
– High reflectivity
Forces Acting on a Material
• Tensile – stretching, pulling apart
• Penetration - impact
•When a metal
solidifies, the atoms
arrange themselves
into a space lattice
or crystal
Cold Working
Three Methods of Metal
Working
Extrusion
Ferrous Metals
• Carbon Steel
• 2xxx Nickel
• 4xxx Molybdenum
Steel Numbering System
• 5xxx Chromium
• 7xxx Tungsten
1 0 4 0
Carbon Steel No Alloy 0.40% carbon
4 1 3 0
– Heat
– Soak
– Cool
Heat Treatment of Steel
• Heat
– Soak
– Soak
– Soak
• Two Methods
– Carburizing
– Nitriding
Heat Treatment of Steel
• Carburizing
– Cool
Heat Treatment of Steel
• Advantage - hardness runs deep
(~0.070”); good anti-corrosion
– Cool
Heat Treatment of Steel
• Disadvantage - susceptible to corrosion,
depth of hardening is less (~ 0.035”),
dangerous (highly flammable)
Drop Forging
Heat Treatment of Steel
Drop Forge
Rohr Industries
Heat Treating Temperatures for Steel
1000°F Gray, Slight Red
575°F Blue
520°F Purple
480°F Brown
1700°F Orange
1400°F Red
Non-ductile -
cannot be
welded or
tempered
Cast Iron
Inexpensive
compared to
wrought iron
Grain structure
is random
Cast Iron
Close
tolerance
right out of
the mold
Cannot
reshape;
you’re stuck
with the cast
Wrought Iron
• Manufactured by cold rolling (material
cools as it comes out of a slot, rollers
press into sheet form) or extruded; a hot
and cold rolled process
• Ductile
– Rod – round
– Corrosion resistant
– Easy to fabricate
Aluminum
– Good electrical conductor
– Cast
• Accurate to within ±0.001”
– Wrought
• This means the aluminum has been rolled or
worked after casting
Aluminum Alloys
• Old System of Identification
– The aluminum alloy number is based on the
experiment number; e.g. A17S
A 17 S
Modification Wrought
Experiment
Number
Aluminum Alloys
• New System of Identification – started in
1958
– 2000 – Copper
• Structural, allows heat treatment, increases
strength and hardness
Aluminum Alloys
– 3000 – Manganese
• Improves strength and corrosion resistance
– 4000 – Silicon
• Lower melting point, used in welding and brazing
– 5000 – Magnesium
• Corrosion resistance, hardness, and welding ability
Aluminum Alloys
– 7000 – Zinc
• High strength, very hard
– 8000 – Experimental
Aluminum Alloys
• Exception: concerning the 1000 series, the
last 2 digits indicate the percentage of
aluminum purity above 99%, in 0.01%
• Examples
– 44 in 1044 means 99.44% pure aluminum
• Natural aging
– 90% of full strength is reached in the first 24
hours
– “O” – Annealed
– “S” - Wrought
Temper Codes for Wrought
Aluminum and Alloys
– “F” - As Fabricated
• O – annealed
– Re-crystallized (wrought products only) or
“soft”
– With aluminum, annealed is basically normal
Heat Treatment of Aluminum Alloys
• Full Annealing – removes the effects of
previous heat treatment
– Heat - from 750°F-800°F
– Heat – 350°F
– 2 – 1/4 hard
– 4 – 1/2 hard
– 6 - 3/4 hard
Cold Worked Aluminum
– 8 – Full hard (maximum amount of
commercially practicable cold working)
– Easy to fabricate
Old
Code 2S 72S A54S 3S 52S
New
Code 1100 7072 5154 3003 5052
– Medium strength
– Primary structure
Classes of Aluminum
Old
Code 14S 17S 24S 75S A78S
New
Code 2014 2017 2024 7075 7178
Brass -
Copper
and Zinc
Copper Alloys
Bronze –
Copper and Tin
Titanium
• Advantages
– good strength
– Hard to machine