Class 3
Class 3
Class 3
Properties of Materials
Engineering Materials
ENGINEERING MATERIALS
Materials
Metal
Ferrous
Non-Ferrous
Non-metal
Composites
Ceramics
Plastics
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Aluminium
Predominantly used in aerospace industry
( 80.0% weight / commercial aircraft ) in
the form of Al/Al alloy
Al has emerged as a valuable source of
metal for the automobile industry too .
Superalloys
Ni, Fe, Ti and Co form the base of these
materials
Aerospace: Ti- based superalloys (Al, C, Mo,
V)
Turbine blades are Ni-based (Fe, Cr)
Ceramics
Crystalline
Amorphous
Ceramic glasses
Metallic glasses
PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS
Mechanical Properties
Physical Properties
Properties
Physical
Density
Thermal
Conductivity
Electrical
Conductivity
Mechanical
Chemical
Material
response to
applied load
Corrosion
Tensile
Compressive
Shear
Load cells
Extensometer
Definition of Parameters
Engineering stress:
S = F/A0
Original area
Engineering strain:
L Lo
e=
Lo
Definiciones
Parameters
Yield strength (Y)
Stress at which plastic deformation starts to occur
S = Ee
Max Load
Ultimate tensile strength (UTS) UTS =
AO
Maximum engineering stress
Stress at which necking or strain localization occurs
Y(0.002)
Figure 2.2 (a) Or iginal and final shape of a standar d tensile-test specimen. (b)
Note: In this figure, length is denoted by lower case l.
Outline of a tensile-test sequence showing stages in the elongation of the specimen.
Necking
Ductility
Ductility: Measure of the amount of plastic
deformation a material can take before it
fractures.
L f LO
% Elongation to Fracture: % El =
x 100
LO
% El is affected by specimen gage length. Short
specimens show larger % El
% Reduction in Area
AO AF
% Ar =
x 100
AO
METALS (WROUGHT)
Aluminum and its alloys
Copper and its alloys
Lead and its alloys
Magnesium and its alloys
Molybdenum and its alloys
Nickel and its alloys
Steels
Stainless Steels
Titanium and its alloys
Tungsten and its alloys
E (GPa)
69-79
105-150
14
41-45
330-360
180-214
190-200
190-200
80-130
350-400
35-550
90-600
76-1100
140-1310
14
20-55
130-305
240-380
80-2070
90-2340
105-1200
345-1450
205-1725
415-1750
240-480
480-760
344-1380
415-1450
550-690
620-760
(ELOGATION
(%) in 50 mm
45-5
65-3
50-9
21-5
40-30
60-5
65-2
60-20
25-7
0
POISSOS
RATIO (v)
0.31-0.34
0.33-0.35
0.43
0.29-0.35
0.32
0.31
0.28-0.33
0.28-0.30
0.31-0.34
0.27
NONMETALLIC MATERIALS
Ceramics
Diamond
Glass and porcelain
Rubbers
Thermoplastics
Thermoplastics, reinforced
Thermosets
Boron fiber
Carbon fibers
Glass fibers (S, E)
Kevlar fibers (29, 49, 129)
Spectra fibers (900, 1000)
70-100
820-1050
70-80
0.01-0.1
1.4-3.4
2-50
3.5-17
380
275-415
73-85
70-113
73-100
140-26000
0.2
140
7-80
20-120
35-170
3500
2000-5300
3500-4600
3000-3400
2400-2800
0
1000-5
10-1
0
0
1-2
5
3-4
3
0.24
0.5
0.32-0.40
0.34
-
Instantaneous
area
True strain:
A0
A
True Strain
l
A
D
D
= ln = ln 0 = ln 0 = 2 ln 0
A
D
D
l0
l0
y
P
x
Conservation of
volume:
Al = A0l0
(UTS)
e = eE
t = K n
K = Strength co-eff
n = Strain-hardening exponent
= K
K :strength coefficient
(true stress at unit true strain)
K (MPa)
180
690
210
205
410
400
895
580
720
2070
315
725
530
965
760
760
1015
1100
640
1200
1450
1275
960
n
0.20
0.16
0.13
0.20
0.05
0.17
0.49
0.34
0.46
0.50
0.54
0.13
0.26
0.14
0.19
0.08
0.17
0.14
0.15
0.05
0.07
0.45
0.10
Ideal Plastic
material
1
U R = YSe0 =
2
2E
2
YS
Material
Medium-carbon steel
High-carbon spring steel
Duralumin
Copper
Rubber
Acrylic polymer
Metallic Glass
E (GPa)
207
207
72
110
0.0010
3.4
150 -250
YS (MPa)
310
965
124
28
2.1
14
3000-5000
Modulus of
Resilience, (KPa)
232
2250
107
3.5
2140
28
30,000
Brittle
Fracture
Ductile
Fracture
Effect of temperature
Effect of temperature
Effect of temperature
Effect of temperature