Week-01
Week-01
ME 322
MANUFACTURING
PROCESSES
Wg Cdr (R) Dr Fareed Ahmad, PhD (Industrial Engg)
Course Outline
2
Title:
ME-322: Manufacturing Processes
Books
Fundamentals of Modern Manufacturing, Mikell P. Groover
Materials and Processes in Manufacturing, Paul Degarmo
Grading
Quizzes (6) 15%
Assignments (Pres+ Report) 5%
Mid Semester (1) 30%
Final 50%
Tentative Plan
3
Topic Week/
Lecture
Introduction to Manufacturing processes and materials 1-2
Metal Casting 3-4
Foundry, sand casting, Die casting, permanent mold casting etc.
Forming and Shaping of Plastic and Composite
Compression/Transfer/Injection molding etc. 5-6
Forming and shaping of metals (Bulk & Sheet metal)
Rolling, Forging, Extrusion, Forming, Drawing, etc. 7-9
Metal Cutting
Lathe, Milling, Shaper, Planner, Drilling, Tools, Grinding, Broaching 10-11
etc.
Joining Processes and Equipment
Temp/Perm joining, Welding, Soldering, Brazing, tec. 12-15
Quality, Measurement and Inspection
16
Course Learning Outcomes
4
Welding
Forging
Casting
RP Machine
Manufacturing System
Assembly Line (Part/Process Oriented)
Laser manufacturing, cutting etc.
etc…
Course Contents
10
Metal Casting
Foundry, sand casting, Die casting, permanent mold casting etc.
Forming and Shaping of Plastic
Compression/Transfer/Injection molding etc.
Forming and shaping of metals
Rolling, Forging, Extrusion, Forming, Drawing, etc.
Metal Cutting
Lathe, Milling, Shaper, Planner, Drilling, Tools, Grinding etc.
Joining Processes and Equipments
Temp/Perm joining, Welding, Soldering, Brazing, tec.
Quality, Measurement and Inspection
11
INTRODUCTION
Ch. 1
INTRODUCTION
12
What is Manufacturing?
Materials in Manufacturing
Manufacturing Processes
Production Systems
What is Manufacturing?
13
Examples?
Manufacturing Capability
17
Metals
Usually alloys, which are composed of two or more elements,
at least one of which is metallic
Ceramics
compounds containing metallic/semi-metallic and nonmetallic
elements. Typical nonmetallic elements are oxygen, nitrogen,
and carbon. Ceramics are typically hard and chemically non-
reactive. Cement, refractory bricks, glass etc are few
examples
Polymers
Polymers comprise of large molecules composed of repeating
chemical subunits known as monomers. Examples of synthetic
polymers include nylon, polyethylene, polyester, Teflon, and
epoxy
Materials in Manufacturing
In addition to the three basic categories, there
are: Composites
Non-homogeneous mixtures of the other three basic
types rather than a unique category
Manufacturing Processes
24
Processing operations
Transform a work material from one state of completion
to a more advanced state
Consist of operations that change the geometry,
properties, or appearance of the starting material
Assembly operations
Join two or more components in order to create a new
entity
Processing Operations
25
Shaping operations
Alter the geometry of the starting work material
Property-enhancing operations
Improve physical properties of the material without
changing its shape
Solidification processes
starting material is a heated liquid or semi-fluid that solidifies to form
part geometry
Particulate processing
Starting material is a powder, and the powders are formed into desired
geometry and then sintered to harden
Deformation processes
Starting material is a ductile solid that is deformed
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES
OF MATERIALS
Ch. 3
Mechanical Properties in
Design and Manufacturing
35
Stress-Strain Relationships
Hardness
Effect of Temperature on Properties
Fluid Properties
Stress-Strain Relationships
37
Elastic region
Hooke's Law : e = E ɛ
Plastic region
After yielding of the material
The stress-strain relationship is no longer guided by Hooke's
Law
As load is increased beyond Y, elongation proceeds at a
much faster rate than before, causing the slope of the curve
to change dramatically
Necking
40
True stress-strain curve
41
Hot Hardness
48
THE END