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06 - Selection of Materials

The lecture focuses on the materials selection process in engineering design, emphasizing the importance of matching material properties with application specifications. It introduces the concept of Materials Index and Ashby charts as tools for systematic material selection, highlighting methods for data browsing, property bar charts, and materials selection charts. The lecture outlines a four-step systematic process for material selection, including translation, screening, ranking, and documentation, to optimize material performance for specific engineering applications.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
14 views18 pages

06 - Selection of Materials

The lecture focuses on the materials selection process in engineering design, emphasizing the importance of matching material properties with application specifications. It introduces the concept of Materials Index and Ashby charts as tools for systematic material selection, highlighting methods for data browsing, property bar charts, and materials selection charts. The lecture outlines a four-step systematic process for material selection, including translation, screening, ranking, and documentation, to optimize material performance for specific engineering applications.

Uploaded by

himadri05sghs
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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MME101 Materials Engineering Fundamentals

Lecture 06
A. K. M. Bazlur Rashid Part A: Introduction
Professor, Dept. of Materials and Metallurgical Eng.
Bangladesh Univ. of Eng. and Tech., Dhaka-1000 6 – Selection of materials

Lecture outcome (LO)

At the end of this lecture, students should be able to


1. understand and explain the selection process of materials,
2. understand the concept of Materials Index and the use of Ashby charts, and
3. select systematically suitable material(s) for specific application
based on material index.

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1. Introduction
❑ Materials selection is the final practical ❑ In many technological fields, the design of
decision in the engineering design process engineering components and structures is
that can determine the design’s ultimate limited by the available materials.
success or failure.
❑ The 20th Century has been a period of
• The process mainly involves matching out the
unprecedented evolution of materials. This
properties of a given, rather limited set of
materials with that of the required specifications will continue in the 21st Century.
governed by the application.
❑ New materials enable new designs.
❑ Selection of materials may also depend on
other factors such as availability, economy,
❑ In this lecture, we set out the basic
ease of handling and fabrication, durability
procedure for selection, establishing the
and workability.
link between material and function.
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2. The materials kingdom


❑ To systematically go about material selection (using a computer),
we need an organised database for all materials across a wide range of properties,
including mechanical, thermal, electrical and general properties, cost etc.

❑ The organization of the


data goes from the most
general (e.g., class of
metals) to the most
detailed (of a particular
member of the class).

The taxonomy of the universe of materials and their attributes.


Computer-based selection software stores data in a
hierarchical structure like this
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A simple case study in material selection

Step 1 Step 2
• Required specification for commercial gas cylinder : Metals and alloys
storing gas at 14 MPa (2000 psi) for indefinite period.
• Semiconducting materials cannot be used for structural
Ferrous Nonferrous
applications.
(rejected for low fatigue strength)
• Polymers must be rejected because of their limited strength.
Steels Cast irons
• Ceramic materials have such strength, but unreliable (rejected for brittleness)
because of their brittleness (or, low ductility).
• Composites can be used but have high cost. Carbon / Low-alloy steels High-alloy Steels
(expensive)
• Metals and alloys provide combination of sufficient strength
Gas cylinder and ductility to serve as excellent candidates.
AISI 1031 ← Selected material
Selected materials family → Metals and alloys (ASTM A414 - Grade G)

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3. How do we select materials?


Method #1: Data browsing
Find material data by reference books, software and/or internet

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Method #2: Property bar chart
Plot property data as bar charts showing range of properties for a given material

Each bar describes one material;


its length shows the range exhibited
by that material in its various forms.
The materials are segregated by class.
Each class shows a characteristic range.

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Method #3: Materials selection chart


For designs requiring the optimization of two (or more) attributes,
plot one property versus the another

Ashby
Charts

Data for a given family of materials


cluster together and can be enclosed
in a property envelope.
Range is chosen to include all materials
– from the lightest, flimsiest foam to the
stiffest, heaviest metals
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4. The materials selection process

❑ A material has attributes:


density, strength, cost, resistance to corrosion, …

❑ A design demands certain profile of these attributes:


a low density, a high strength, a modest cost, good resistance to sea water, …

❑ The task of selection is that of


1. identifying the desired attribute profile
2. comparing this profile with those of real engineering materials
to find the best match

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a container

Data:
Design requirements:
Material attributes
expressed as
Process attributes
Constraints and Objectives Documentation

Ability to be moulded Comparison Engine: Price


Water and UV resistant Density
Stiff enough Screening Modulus
Strong enough Ranking Strength
Documentation Durability
As cheap as possible
Process compatibility
As light as possible
More ....
Final Selection
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Four steps in systematic materials selection process

1. Translation:
use design equations, including materials related equation to maximise
or minimise objective function to develop an expression which consists
of materials properties, functional properties and design variables for
the component.

2. Screening:
set minimum or maximum values on properties which all candidates
must meet and eliminate materials that cannot

3. Ranking:
use the materials selection charts to narrow the choices down to a few
candidates that do the job best

4. Documentation:
Detailed information of the top-ranked candidates to select one material
the strategy for materials selection 12/36

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4.1 Setting up the design problem (Translation)

Seven steps of translation:


1. Defining design requirements
2. Developing objective equation(s)
3. Developing constraint equation(s)
4. Defining and isolating free variable(s)
5. Substituting free variable(s)
6. Developing performance metric, P
7. Maximizing / minimizing performance metric

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Boundary conditions of materials selection

❑ Function: what does the component do?


support a load, contain a pressure, transmit heat,…

❑ Objective: what is to be minimised or maximized?


to make it as cheap as possible, to make it as light as possible,
to make it as strong as possible, …

•hard constraints – requirements that must be met


❑ Constraints: dictated by design e.g., stiffness, strength, dimensions, thermal conductivity …
length is fixed, component must carry a certain load, •soft constraints – desirable, but not compulsory, to fulfill
component must operate above a certain temperature,… e.g., cost, finish, colour …..

❑ Free Variables: what is the designer free to change?


materials choice (always for us!), cross-sectional area,
cross-sectional shape is free, colour, …

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Common components used mechanical design

Tie rod (a tensile component)

Beam (loaded in bending)


Panel (loaded in bending)

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Common constraints Common objectives


Meet a target value of Minimise
⚫ Stiffness ⚫ Cost
⚫ Strength ⚫ Mass
⚫ Fracture toughness ⚫ Volume
⚫ Thermal conductivity ⚫ Impact on environment
⚫ Electrical resistivity ⚫ Heat loss
⚫ Magnetic remanence
Maximise
⚫ Optical transparency
⚫ Energy storage
⚫ Cost
⚫ Heat flow
⚫ Mass

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Example 1: Setting up the boundary conditions for a corkscrew lever

Function Lever loaded in bending


Constraints Stiff enough
Strong enough functional
Some toughness constraints
Resist corrosion in juice and water
Length is specified geometric constraint
Objective Minimise cost
A corkscrew lever Free variables Choice of material
Choice of cross-sectional area

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Example 2: Setting up the boundary conditions for a CD case

Function Contain and protect a CD (panel)


Constraints Optically clear
Ability to be injection moulded functional
High fracture toughness constraints
High toughness
Dimension to hold a CD geometric constraint
Objective Minimise cost
Free variables Choice of material
Thickness of the case

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Problem 1: A material is required for a disposable fork for a fast-food chain.
Determine the design requirements that you would see as important in this application.

Function • Disposable cutlery

• Easy (and thus cheap) to mould


• Non-toxic
• Sufficient strength and stiffness (modulus)
Constraints
to withstand loads in use
• Recyclable or renewable (e.g., wooden cutlery)
• Ability to be colored (?)
Objective • Minimize price

Free variables • Choice of material

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Problem 2: A Trucks rely on compressed air for braking and other power-actuated systems.
The air is stored in a cylindrical pressure tank like that shown here (length L, diameter 2R,
hemispherical ends). Most are made of low-carbon steel, and they are heavy. The task is to
explore the potential of alternative materials for lighter air tanks. List the design requirements.

Function • Air cylinder for Truck

• Must not fail by yielding


Constraints
• Diameter 2R and length L specified

Objective • Minimize mass m


• Wall thickness t
Free variables
• Choice of material

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Developing performance metric, P

(a) Develop equation(s) for the design objective


in terms of functional requirements, geometry and materials properties

(b) One such equations is an objective equation which indicates


the quantity that must be maximised or minimised
e.g., mass: m = ρ A L

(c) List the constraints of the problem


no buckling, high stiffness, no yielding, high fracture toughness

(d) Develop constraint equation(s)


this must be satisfied in the design

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(e) Defining and isolating free variable(s)


which are related to the design objectives (e.g., area A)

(f) Substituting free variables from the objective equation(s)


into the constraint equation(s)
(g) Developing performance metric, P, by grouping the variables
into three groups:
(1) functional requirements (F)
(2) geometry (G)
(3) materials (M)

P = f1(F) . f2(G) . f3(M)

(h) Maximising / minimising performance metric using materials index (M)


with the help of materials selection charts

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4.2 Screening (applying the attribute limits)

❑ An unbiased selection requires that all materials be considered


as candidates until shown to be otherwise.

❑ All designs have non-negotiable limits which all candidate materials


must meet to be considered.
e.g., electrical resistivity, transparency, yield strength, etc.

❑ Screening allows us to eliminate materials that do not meet


these requirements (a.k.a. attribute limits).
E ≥ 10 GPa (stiff)
 < 3000 kg/m3 (light)
KIC ≥ 15 MPa·m1⁄2 (tough)
ρelect ≤ 105 Ω·m (good conductor)
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Attribute Limits
E ≥ 10 GPa (stiff)
 < 3000 kg/m3 (light)

Search Area

E = 10 GPa

 = 3000 kg/m3

Modulus – Density Chart


showing lower limit for modulus and upper limit for density 24/36

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4.3 Ranking (using the materials index)

❑ Attribute limits do not help with ordering the candidates that remain.
To do this we need optimization criteria.

❑ The performance metric and materials selection charts are used to select
a smaller number of candidates whose performance is optimised with respect
to the application
performance is sometimes limited by a single property,
sometimes by a combination of properties

• screening ➔ isolates candidates that are capable of doing the job


• ranking ➔ identifies those among them that can do the job best

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Performance and Materials Indices

❑ The Material Index (M) is a specific function, the criteria of excellence,


derived from design equations that involve only material properties
which characterizes the performance of a material in a given application.

❑ When M maximises, performance is also maximized.

❑ Each structural member performs a function.


❑ We want to know what materials optimize the performance of the member.

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The 5-Step program to determine material performance

Step 1: Identify function, constraints, objective and free variable(s)

Step 2: Write down equation for objective function


– “the performance equation”

Step 3: If performance equation contains a free variable


identify the constraint that limits it

Step 4: Use this constraint to eliminate the free variable


in the performance equation

Step 5: Read off the combination of properties that maximize performance

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Case Study #1
material index for light, strong tie

❑ Maximize the performance of a tie rod that must


carry a tensile force F* without failure and be as
light as possible. The length L is specified but the
L
cross-section area A is not.
strong structural member loaded in tension

maximizing performance
minimizing the mass,
while still carrying the load F* safely

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Function:  tie rod

Objective equation:  minimise mass m = (A L)  (1)

Constraints:  length L is specified


 must not fail under load F*
 constraint on area:
A must be sufficient to carry F* and the failure strength f
F*/A  f (2)

Free variables:  cross-sectional area A


 material choice m = (F*/ f) L 
m = F* L (/f)
Eliminate the free variable A from
the objective equation, eq.(1) using functional constraint material properties
the constraint equation, eq.(2) : geometric constraint

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m = F* L (/f)

❑ The performance P will be maximized (i.e., the mass m will be minimized)


when the material properties will be minimized, i.e.,
the lightest tie that will carry F* safely is that made of the material
with the smallest value of ρ/σf.

❑ It is more usual when dealing with specific properties to express


them in a form for which a maximum is sought.
❑ So, the material index (which is to be maximised) is:
f
M = 

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Case Study #2
material index for stiff, light panel

Function Panel with given width 𝑤 and length 𝐿.

Objective Minimise mass m, where 𝑚 = 𝐴𝐿𝜌 = 𝑤𝑡 𝐿𝜌


𝐶𝐸𝐼 t
Constraint Stiffness of the panel 𝑆 = 3
𝐿 𝑤𝑡 3
where, 𝐼 is the second moment of area 𝐼 = m = mass
12 w = width
• Material choice L = length
Free variables
• Panel thickness, 𝑡  = density
t = thickness
𝜌 S = stiffness
Combining equations gives Chose materials with smallest
𝐸 1/3 I = second moment of area
1/3 E = Youngs modulus
12 𝑆 𝜌 and the material index (to maximise) is:
𝑚= 𝑤 2/3 𝐿2
𝐶 𝐸1/3 𝑀 = 𝐸1/3 Τ𝜌
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Screening: Use of Ashby charts to select material

Materials falling on this line


M=/ give equal performance

 = M
10000

M = /
1000
log  = log  + log M increases this way
M = 100
Strength (MPa)

100
 = 100
M = 10
10
 = 10
For a  vs.  graph (in log scale), M=1
1
=
slope = 1 contour lines
of slope 1
intercept = log M
0.1
0.1 1 10
Density (Mg m-3)

Intercept = M
logarithmic scales

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4.4 Documentation
❑ From the ranked short list of candidate materials, one material
that is the most suitable is chosen

❑ Why not just choose the top-ranked candidate?

❑ But what do we know about this candidate?


• Does it be shaped, joined, or finished easily?
• What are its strengths and weaknesses?
• Does it have a good reputation?

❑ So, to proceed further, we seek a detailed profile of each candidate:


its documentation
• Such information is found in handbooks, suppliers’ data sheets,
case studies of use, and failure analyses 34/36

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Local conditions

❑ The final choice between competing candidates


will often depend on the local conditions:
• in-house expertise or equipment
• the availability of local suppliers, and so forth

❑ A systematic procedure cannot help here;


the decision must instead be based on local knowledge.

❑ This does not mean that the result of the systematic


procedure is irrelevant.

❑ It is always important to know which material is best,


even if for local reasons you decide not to use it.
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Next Class
MME101: Lecture 07
Part B: Bonding and Structure
1 – Atomic bonding

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