Lecture 1 Introduction
Lecture 1 Introduction
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Organizatorial Aspects
Instructor: Jan Schroers, [email protected]
TA: Sebastian Kube, David Ritzer
22 Classes
Two exams
Grading: Homework (40%), class participation (10%), midterm
(20%), final (30%)
Weekly homework
Text book: Callister, 9th edition, Materials Science and
Engineering, An Introduction, Wiley
Discussion session
Lab excursion
Your instructor
My background
-bigger picture, see the forest for the trees
-less is more
-interactive
-learn with you 2
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What is materials science?
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What is materials science?
Wikipedia: Materials science, also commonly known as materials
science and engineering, is an interdisciplinary field which deals
with the discovery and design of new materials. This relatively
new scientific field involves studying materials through the
materials paradigm (synthesis, structure, properties and
performance). It incorporates elements of physics and chemistry,
and is at the forefront of nanoscience and nanotechnology
research. In recent years, materials science has become more
widely known as a specific field of science and engineering.
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Historical
Materials (access and master in fabrication) plays crucial role for
societies
-wins wars (and races)
-wealth
-food
-health
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Materials Selection Process
Need
Mankind, Society
Problem (Application) -Energy, Cancer, Earthquakes, warfare ..
Scientists, Engineers Scientific Communities
Other Communities
Required Properties Companies
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Ashby Maps
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Materials Selection Process
Need
Mankind, Society
Problem (Application) -Energy, Cancer, Earthquakes, warfare ..
Scientists, Engineers Scientific Communities
Other Communities
Required Properties Companies
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Examples
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Materials enable us to do new things:
Surfboards
100 pounds redwood board (1930)
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Surfboards
Fiberglass surfboard < 10 pounds, ~6,
(Anderson, 1972)
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Materials Insight Us
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Example Hip Implant
With age or certain illnesses joints deteriorate.
Particularly those with large loads (such as hip).
good bad
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Example Hip Implant
Requirements
mechanical
strength (many
cycles)
Same stiffness
than bone
good lubricity
biocompatibility
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Example Hip Implant
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Example Develop New Types of
Foams
Stiffness mismatch a serious problem for implants
Bone ~20 GPA, Titanium ~100 GPa
Only 20% of foam should be titanium
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Example-Biomimetics:
Imitation of Nature
Trust evolution to have arrived at best design/material
Leonardo Da Vinci
burs Velcro
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Materials win
Britta Steffens,2008,
5 x world records 100 meter!
2008:
13 out of 35 world records with the magic suit
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Lotus Effect
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Limitation of Biomimetics Approach
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Bring in some structure!
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Material Classes
Various categorization schemes, e.g.:
Metal, non-metal,
Metals, semiconductor, insulators
Organic, inorganic
For general practical (structural) applications:
Solid Materials
Also: composites
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Metals
What is going on with metals?
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MOORES LAW
Doubles
every ~year
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Metals Law
8000 Years 30
Metals Law
Figure of Merit?
8000 Years 31
Metals Law
Strength
8000 Years 32
Metals Law
Strength x Toughness
8000 Years 33
Metals Law
*KIC
BMGs
100,000 Steels
Doubles every 600 years
Ni alloy or Ti
alloy
Cu alloy W alloy
10000
Au alloy Al alloy
Cast Mg
1000 iron alloy
6000BC 3000 BC 1000 BC 16002000 34
Year
Metals vs Moores Law
%increase/year
Microelectronics
Metals
8000 Years 35
METALS
Most versatile structural material
Application range (10 nm 100 m)
Historically important
(warfare, Guns germs and steels
Long used material, Iron age 1200 BC
bronze 3000 BC
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Metals
Most metals are chemically reactive with oxygen, oxidation
-big issue, ~5% of an industrial nations income is spend on
corrosion prevention and replacement
-disadvantageous in service but advantageous in refinement
-Na, Ca, Al are the most reactive
-Noble metals, Au, Pd, Pt, (Ta) do not react with oxygen
-some metals oxidize fast but form a pacifying oxide layer on surface (Al, Ti, SS)
Structure&properties:
Large number of non-localized electrons (metallic bonds, isotropic) results in:
-Highly ordered and dense (fcc, hcp, bcc)
-Very good thermal&electrical conductor
Electrons too
-limited use at high temperatures slow to screen
-Not transparent to visible light
-Stiff,strong,ductile, tough, highest damage tolerance
(thats why metals are used as structural materials)
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Processing of Metals
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Metals processing
Alloying and casting
High temp., >1600C steel
Pre-shapes
TprocTm0.6
forging
casting rolling
extrusion
Also powder metallurgy
MIM
TprocTamb
drawing stamping SPF
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Ceramics
Top:
A: pressure,
Green compact
B:sintering
(temperature&pressure) Ceramic injection
molding
Bottom:
A&B: reduction in surface area
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Ceramics Processing
Glass Processing:
-melt
-cool and vitrify (to avoid crystallization)
-form under heat (close to glass transition), gradual softening
-can be crystallized which changes properties, glass ceramics
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Polymers (Synthetic Plastics)
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Polymers
C-H groups form typically long chains with weak interchain bonds
(Van der Waals bonding)
Properties:
Low density (weak bonds and filling of space, spaghetti)
Low stiffness and strength (low bond energy)
But good specific strength, strength/density (comparable to metals)
Very ductile (only break van der Walls bonds, loosely packed)
Can not withstand temperature well (low bond energy
Poor electrical and thermal conductor (localized electrons)
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Properties by Classes of Materials
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Not only the material but also how we
process it is critical!
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Carbon
Graphite
Diamond
Graphene
Fullerene
Carbon Nanotubes 49
Manipulation of Materials:
Structure, Processing, & Properties
Properties depend on structure
ex: hardness vs structure of steel
Processing can change structure
ex: structure vs cooling rate of steel
(d)
600
Hardness (BHN)
30 m
500 (c)
400 (b)
(a)
4 m
300
30 m
200 30 m
100
0.01 0.1 1 10 100 1000
Cooling Rate (C/s) 50
Goals-relationship properties and
microstructure-Imperfections
Imperfections:
-always present, can be significantly reduced or controlled
-utilized
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Imperfections-Impurities
-effect of rimp on solidification, impurities act as crystal seeds
Mechanical
Electrical
Magnetic
Thermal
Optical
Deteriorative
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From here
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From Quantum Mechanics to Materials Properties
Electronic configuration
QM
Valence electrons
Electro negativity
Bonding characteristics
(metallic, covalent, ionic (primary) Van der Waals (secondary)
Properties
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