Aluminium Physical Properties Characteri
Aluminium Physical Properties Characteri
Aluminium Physical Properties Characteri
Aluminium:
Physical Properties, Characteristics and Alloys
60 pages, 44 figures
Basic Level
Objectives:
− to provide a survey of the aluminium alloys available to the user
− to describe their various properties
− to give an insight into the choice of aluminium for a proposed application.
In the context of this lecture not every individual alloy and its properties have been
treated in detail, but rather divided into alloy types with reference to the most commonly
used alloys. For further details on alloy properties the reader is referred to available
databanks like ALUSELECT of the European Aluminium Association (EAA) or to the
European and national materials standards.
Prerequisites:
- good engineering background in materials, design and manufacturing processes
TALAT 1501
1501 Aluminium: Physical Properties, Characteristics
and Alloys
Contents
TALAT 1501 2
1501.04 Basic Physical Metallurgy ........................................................................ 29
Work Hardening.....................................................................................................29
Dispersion Hardening ............................................................................................30
Solid Solution Hardening.......................................................................................30
Precipitation Hardening .........................................................................................31
Temper Designations Non Heat-Treatable Alloys .................................................32
Temper Designations Heat-Treatable Alloys.........................................................33
Common Alloys and Applications.........................................................................34
1501.05 Aluminium Alloys ; Mechanical Properties............................................ 36
Tensile Strength .....................................................................................................36
Strength/Weight Ratio ...........................................................................................36
Proof Stress ............................................................................................................37
Elastic Properties ...................................................................................................39
Elongation ..............................................................................................................40
Compression ..........................................................................................................41
Bearing...................................................................................................................42
Shear ......................................................................................................................43
Hardness.................................................................................................................43
Ductility .................................................................................................................44
Creep ......................................................................................................................45
Properties at Elevated Temperatures......................................................................46
Properties at Low Temperatures ............................................................................48
Impact Strength ......................................................................................................49
Fracture Characteristics..........................................................................................49
Fatigue....................................................................................................................52
1501.06 Literature/References ............................................................................... 58
1501.07 List of Figures............................................................................................ 59
TALAT 1501 3
1501.01 History and Present State of Aluminium Production
Rare and expensive a century ago, aluminium has since been identified as the most
common metal on earth, forming about eight percent of the earth's crust. It is the third
most plentiful element known to man. Only oxygen and silicon (sand) exist in greater
quantities.
It was only in 1808 that Sir Humphrey Davy, the British electrochemist, established the
existence of aluminium, and it was not until 17 years later that the Danish scientist Oersted
produced the first tiny pellet of the metal.
The next step in the ″discovery″ of aluminium was the determination of its specific gravity
by the German scientist Wöhler in 1845. He established one of aluminium's outstanding
characteristics - lightness. He also discovered that it was easy to shape, was stable in air,
and could be melted with a blow torch.
Thirty years later improvements in production methods made in association with Hamilton
Y. Castner, an American chemist, had lowered the price to $18 (£12) per kg. The metal
was still potentially plentiful and useful but, even at this substantially reduced price, too
expensive for general use. The total annual output at this time was only 15 tonnes.
Then two unknown young scientists - Paul Louis Toussaint Héroult of France and Charles
Martin Hall of the United States - took over the scientific search for the low-cost
production of aluminium. They worked separately, each unaware of the other’s activities,
in their respective countries. In 1886, after heart-breaking failures and little
encouragement, the two scientists - almost simultaneously - came up with the same new
process.
The scientists who preceded Héroult and Hall had been concerned entirely with a chemical
process for producing the metal. Héroult and Hall introduced a new concept. They
TALAT 1501 4
believed that the answer to economic production lay in an electrolytic method. They had
the idea that if some substance could be found which would conduct electricity and in
which aluminium oxide (Al2O3), known as alumina, would dissolve, then an electric
current passed through the solution could deposit the aluminium as metal.
There are some solutions which will dissolve aluminium, but these are aqueous (water)
solutions. Unfortunately, water cannot be used because it would break down instead of the
alumina when an electrical current is passed through it. There followed a long and intense
search for a non-aqueous solution that would dissolve alumina. Both Hall and Héroult
discovered that molten cryolite was the answer. Cryolite is a white translucent, sodium-
aluminium fluoride material component found in its natural state only in Greenland. Most
of the cryolite used in aluminium production today is synthetically produced.
Held at 1030°C, the molten cryolite dissolves up to 20% of alumina readily. The
electrolytic cell holding the molten cryolite is a tank lined with carbon which serves as one
electrode. Large carbon blocks inserted from the top of the bath act as the anode, or other
electrode, and a heavy electrical current is passed between these two sets of electrodes
through the solution. This current breaks down the alumina into aluminium and oxygen.
The molten metallic aluminium collects at the bottom of the cell and is drained off every
few days as sufficient metal accumulates (see Figure 1501.01.01). The oxygen combines
with the carbon at the anodes and is given off as carbon dioxide gas. This became the first
industrially applied method of making the metal aluminium from alumina, and is the one
still in use today.
Al2O3.3H2O
Digester B
Red Mud Residue D Alumina Al2O3
Molten
Electrolyte Holding Furnace I
Molten Aluminium
Pot G ALUMINIUM INGOT J
ELECTROLYTIC PROCESS
Raw Materials and Processes
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1501.01.01
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies for Aluminium Production
The immediate effect of the discovery of this process was to send the price of aluminium
tumbling from $18 to $4.50 per kg, the first step in a downward course which has today
established the selling price in terms of under two dollars per kg.
The first aluminium production companies were founded in 1888, two years after the
electrolytic process was discovered - one each in France, the United States and
TALAT 1501 5
Switzerland. But the discoveries bringing about low-cost production did not lead directly
to the widespread use of aluminium. Manufacturers, schooled in the traditions and skilled
in the use of metals such as iron, copper and steel, were slow to capitalize on the potential
benefits of this metal although it was known to be light, strong and highly resistant to
corrosion. The first plant using the Héroult patent in fact produced aluminium bronze, for
which there was a market. For many years after it became possible to make aluminium at a
low price, it remained difficult to sell.
Alumina is produced in a totally separate first stage process from Bauxite ore. This
(Bayer) chemical process starts by immersing crushed bauxite into a caustic soda solution
which dissolves the alumina to form sodium aluminate liquor (Figure 1501.01.01).
After filtering, the impurities are left behind as a "red mud" and the liquid is treated to
precipitate the aluminium content out of the solution which is now in the form of
aluminium hydroxide. This material is then separated from the liquor and changed to
alumina, which resembles course granulated sugar, by heating in kilns at 1000°C.
Approximately 4 kilogrammes of bauxite is required to produce 2 kilogrammes of
alumina.
Although the process of manufacturing aluminium has changed little since the Héroult-
Hall discovery the efficiency and environmental aspects have improved over the years. In
today’s modern plants 12 to 14 kilowatt hours of electricity and 2 kilogrammes of alumina
would be required to produce 1 kilogramme of metal. A more detailed breakdown of the
raw materials to produce a tonne of metal is shown in Figure 1501.01.02.
BAUXITE 4 - 6 TONNES
Fuel Oil 0.45 tonnes ALUMINA 2 TONNES
Caustic Soda
0.08 tonnes
ALUMINA PLANT
ALUMINIUM SMELTER
ALUMINIUM 1 TONNE
Power 12000 - 14000 kWh/ tonne
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Raw Materials to Produce One Tonne
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies of Aluminium Ingot 1501.01.02
TALAT 1501 6
The Aluminium Industry Today
The production of primary aluminium is a young industry - just over 100 years old. But it
has developed to the point where scores of companies in some 35 countries are smelting
aluminium and thousands more are manufacturing the many end products to which
aluminium is so well suited.
For its first half century the aluminium industry pursued the dual role of improving and
enlarging production processes to reduce the price of the metal and, at the same time,
proving the worth and feasibility of aluminium in a wide range of markets. Such was the
dynamic approach of the industry to this problem that the consumption of aluminium
gained the remarkable record of doubling every ten years. The strong demand for
aluminium stimulated the rapid expansion of productive capacity to meet it.
The first World War had a dramatic effect on aluminium production and consumption. In
the six years between 1914 and 1919 world output soared from 70,800 tonnes to 132,500
tonnes a year and it is a striking testimony to the adaptability of the metal that after the
very large expansion occasioned by war the ground was held. Once the changeover to
civilian production had been carried through the increased capacity was occupied before
very long in supplying the normal demands of industry. And this happened again, on a
much larger scale, as a result of the second World War.
World production of primary aluminium increased from 704,000 tonnes in 1939 to a peak
of 1,950,000 tonnes in 1943, after which it declined considerably. At the end of World
War II, the western world industry had completed an unprecedented threefold expansion in
capacity in the space of four to five years. Civilian markets had to be developed for this
new capacity. The demand for aluminium proved to be elastic and the expanded facilities
were working at near capacity in a matter of a few years.
Constant research and product development throughout the 1950's, 60's and 70's led to an
almost endless range of consumer goods incorporating aluminium. Its basic benefits of
lightness, strength, durability, formability, conductivity and finishability made it a much
sought after product.
The necessity for the industry itself to pioneer the use of aluminium led to an integrated
structure in the major companies from the mining of bauxite to, in some cases, the finished
consumer product. As the total world production soared, countries with raw materials and
especially those with cheap energy resources, began to enter the market with primary
metal for others to further the process. Today a significant proportion of metal is marketed
in this way.
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Recycled or Secondary Aluminium
The most dramatic example of recycled metal is in the United States. In the USA of the
one million tonnes of aluminium sheet used annually for beer and beverage cans, over
50% is supplied from used can scrap. Europe is now following this example with the
building of dedicated aluminium can recycling plants.
• Atomic structure
• Crystal structure
• Density
• Electrical conductivity and resistivity
• Non-magnetic property
• Thermal conductivity
• Reflectance and emissivity
• Corrosion resistance
• Thermal expansion
• Melting temperature
• Specific and latent heats
Atomic Structure
Aluminium is the third most plentiful element known to man, only oxygen and silicon
exist in greater quantities. The element aluminium, chemical symbol Al, has the atomic
number 13. According to present concepts, this means that an aluminium atom is
composed of 13 electrons, each having a unit negative electrical charge, arranged in three
orbits around a highly concentrated nucleus having a positive charge of 13. The three
electrons in the outer orbit give the aluminium atom a valence or chemical combining
power of +3 (see Figure 1501.02.01).
TALAT 1501 8
Crystal Structure
When metals change from the molten to the solid state, they assume crystalline structures.
The atoms arrange themselves in definite ordered symmetrical patterns which
metallurgists speak of as "lattice" structures. Aluminium, like copper, silver and gold,
crystallizes with the face-centred-cubic arrangement of atoms, common to most of the
ductile metals. This means that the atoms form the corners of a cube, with one atom in the
centre of each face (see Figure 1501.02.01). The length of the sides of the cube for high
purity aluminium has been determined as 4.049 x 10-8 cm, the shortest distance between
two atoms in the aluminium structure is 2 divided by 2 x 4.049. The face centred cubic
structure is one of the arrangements assumed by close packed spheres, in this case with a
diameter of 4.049 x 10-8 cm, the corners of the cube being at the centre of each sphere.
2
2 + 8 ELECTRONS 3
(8)
1
6
1m 4
1mm 5
NUCLEUS
1 2 3
1µm
(8)
4 6
3 VALENCY ELECTRONS
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Density
Lightness is the outstanding and best known characteristic of aluminium. The metal has an
atomic weight of 26.98 and a specific gravity of 2.70, approximately one-third the weight
of other commonly used metals; with the exception of titanium and magnesium (see
Figure 1501.02.02). As with most metals the density decreases with increasing
temperature. The addition of other metals in the amounts commonly used in aluminium
alloys does not appreciably change the density (plus 3%, minus 2%), (see e.g. also Figure
1501.03.05), except in the case of Lithium alloys where the density of the alloy is reduced
by up to 15%. Weight is important for all applications involving motion. Saving weight
results in more payload or greater economy of operation. Saving weight also saves energy,
TALAT 1501 9
reduces vibration forces, improves the performance of reciprocating and moving parts,
reduces tiredness when using manually operated equipment, offers lower shipping,
handling and erection costs. Low weight combined with the high strength possible with
special alloys has placed aluminium as the major material for aircraft construction for the
past sixty years.
Although purchased on a weight basis, metals are generally used on a volume basis, it is
therefore important to compare the cost of aluminium with other materials on this basis
(Figure 1501.02.02).
1.55
1.5
0.6
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Volume per Unit Weight 1501.02.02
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies
TALAT 1501 10
The very good electrical properties of aluminium have made it an obvious choice for
applications in the electrical industry, particularly in power distribution where it is used
almost exclusively for overhead transmission lines and busbars. The first major aluminium
transmission line was completed in 1898 in the USA: a 46-mile, three-phase installation
for the Standard Electric Company of California, from Blue Lakes to Stockton. Its use
later became much more general when it was found possible to reinforce the cable (usually
alloy 1350) with galvanised steel wire which increased the spans without too much sag.
Although this product is still used, high strength (6061 type) all aluminium multi-strand
cables are now preferred for some installations because higher line tensions can be
achieved which can be applied to increase the distance between the pylons or alternatively
reduce their height.
1
CONDUCTIVITY =
RESISTIVITY ( r )
where
RESISTANCE ( R ) X SECTION AREA
RESISTIVITY ( r) =
LENGTH OF CONDUCTOR
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Electrical Properties of Aluminium 1501.02.03
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies
Non-Magnetic Property
Aluminium and its alloys are very slightly paramagnetic, as it has a magnetic permeability
(m) slightly greater than one. The magnetic susceptibility χ (Chi), degree of
magnetization/ applied magnetizing force, of 99.99 % purity aluminium is only 0.623 x
10-6, which for practical purposes is regarded as non magnetic (see Figure 1501.02.04).
The relationship between m and χ is given by : m = 1 + 4^χ. Chi is influenced by alloying
as follows:
TALAT 1501 11
Mn increases χ to 0.959at 1.38% Mn
Cr increases χ to 0.669 at 0.63% Cr
V reduces χ to 0.582 at 0.36% V
The magnetic susceptibility is not sensitive to strain hardening, but varies slightly with
temperature.
The low magnetic characteristic of aluminium is of value in military ship structures where
it has advantages of lightness and lower cost over other non-magnetic metals. It is also
used to advantage in electronic equipment for screening where it may also double as heat
sinks, usually in the form of finned extruded profiles. The requirement for manufacturers
of electronic equipment to ensure that their products comply with EEC directives on
Electronic Compatibility, has also led to an increase in the application of vacuum
deposited aluminium films on to plastic enclosures. Special techniques have been
developed to deposit thick layers of aluminium without the need for protective lacquering;
these give very good shielding results and the non-magnetic properties ensure consistent
operation over the life of the product.
MAGNETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY Χg
Χg x 106 at 30 °C
0.64
0.56
ANNEALED
0.48
AS QUENCHED
0.40
0 2 4 6 8 COPPER %
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Thermal Conductivity
The thermal conductivity, κ, of 99.99% pure aluminium is 244 W/mK for the temperature
range 0-1000C which is 61.9% of the IACS, and again because of its low specific gravity
its mass thermal conductivity is twice that of copper (see Figure 1501.02.05). Thermal
conductivity can be calculated from electrical resistivity measurements using the formula
κ =5.02λT x 10-9 +0.03, where κ is the thermal conductivity, λ is the electrical
conductivity and T the absolute temperature in degrees Kelvin; this method is usually used
to derive the values quoted in reference books. The thermal conductivity is reduced
TALAT 1501 12
slightly by the addition of alloying elements. Application of the formula has been found to
be largely independent of composition with the exception of silicon. The combined
properties of high thermal conductivity, low weight and good formability make aluminium
an obvious choice for use in heat exchangers, car radiators and cooking utensils while in
the cast form it is extensively used for I/C engine cylinder heads.
0.57
0.52
0.5 0.5
0.30
0.10 0.19
0.12
0 0
e r M n s M n s
pp IU Iro as pe
r IU Iro as
Co IN y Br op IN
re
y Br
M re C M G
U G U
AL AL
Thermal Conductivity of Aluminium
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1501.02.05
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies Compared with other Metals
Emissivity, the ease with which a substance radiates its own thermal energy, is closely
allied to reflectivity; the best reflecting surface being the poorest emitter, and conversely
the worst reflecting surface being the best emitter. Plain aluminium reflects about 75% of
the light and 90% of the heat radiation that falls on it. The emissivity of the same piece of
aluminium is, however, low (< 10% of that of a black body at the same temperature and
with the same surroundings).
The combined properties of high reflectivity and low emissivity give rise to the use of
aluminium foil as a reflective insulating medium, either in dead air spaces or as a surface
laminate combined with other insulating materials where it can also be arranged to provide
the added benefit of an effective vapour barrier.
The emissivity of the aluminium surface can be raised considerably by anodic treatment
and is therefore a process that is employed in the construction of heat exchangers. E.g.
clear anodic coatings raise the emissivity to between 35 and 65%, the phosphoric and
chromic acid methods being the most effective in this respect. Black anodic coatings have
an even greater effect and raise it as high as 95%. Figure 1501.02.06 shows the effect of
various surface finishes on the emissivity of aluminium.
TALAT 1501 13
Super purity aluminium which has been mechanically polished, chemically brightened by
the "Brytal" process and anodised > 3 microns (µm) thick will give a total reflectivity
(brightness) of greater than 84% and a specular reflectivity (sharpness of mirror image)
greater than 99% (see Figure 1501.02.07).
EMISSIVITY % REFLECTIVITY %
100 100
80 80
60 60
40 40
20 20
0 0
CHEMICALLY BLACK WHITE BLACK CLEAR
BRIGHTENED PAINT PAINT ANODIC ANODIC
ALUMINIUM COATINGS COATINGS
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Reflectivity and Emissivity of Aluminium
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies with Various Surface Treatments 1501.02.06
BRYTAL-TREATED
100 100 99.99% PURE
0.4
ALUMINIUM
80 80
0.3 CHROMIUM
PLATE
60 60
0.2 LACQUERED
40 40 SILVER PLATE
20 0.1
20 STAINLESS
STEEL
0 0 0
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Comparison of Reflectivity of Various Metals 1501.02.07
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies
Even higher reflectivity is obtained by vaporizing the high purity aluminium in a vacuum
and allowing it to re-condense on to glass or plastic surfaces. Aluminium coated mirrors
TALAT 1501 14
produced by this method are of particular interest to astronomers and in some ways are
even more suitable than silver because they offer two important advantages. Firstly, an
astronomical mirror coated with aluminium does not tarnish as quickly as silver and
secondly, aluminium reflects ultra-violet light better. For these reasons the 60 and 100
inch mirrors of the Mount Wilson telescopes were "aluminized" as long ago as 1934.
Corrosion Resistance
Aluminium has a higher resistance to corrosion than many other metals owing to the
protection conferred by the thin but tenacious film of oxide. This oxide layer is always
present on the surface of aluminium in oxygen atmospheres. The graph (see Figure
1501.02.08) shows the degree of corrosion and its effect on strength in two different
environments. The famous statue of Eros in London's Piccadilly Circus is an example of
the corrosion resistance; after an inspection following eighty years of exposure to the
London atmosphere, the statue showed only surface corrosion. The formation of the oxide
is so rapid in the presence of oxygen that special measures have to be taken in thermal
joining processes to prevent the oxide instantly forming while the process is being carried
out.
16 %
4 GAUGE 1.6 mm
0
0 6 10 20 30
YEARS
0.15 mm
MARINE
DEPTH OF PITTING
0.10
0.05 INDUSTRIAL
0
0 6 10 20 30
YEARS
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Pitting Corrosion Behaviour of 3103 Mill Finish
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies Aluminium Sheet 1501.02.08
Aluminium is, however, a very reactive chemical element and its successful resistance to
corrosion depends on the completeness with which the protective film of aluminium oxide
prevents this underlying activity coming into play.
TALAT 1501 15
but containing chromic, phosphoric or sulphuric acid solutions (Figure 1501.02.09). The
anodic film also possesses the property of absorbing dyes thus enabling the metal to be
tinted with attractive and enduring colours, thereby combining decoration with protection.
Nearly all engineering metals are cathodic to aluminium and its alloys, therefore
aluminium becomes sacrificial in the presence of an electrolyte. Exceptions to this
situation are magnesium, cadmium and zinc which are anodic; for this reason cadmium
and zinc are often used as a protection between aluminium and the other metal. 18/8,
18/8/2 and 13% Cr Stainless steels, titanium and chrome plate are further exceptions since
they have a high potential difference to aluminium but form there own protective films
which considerably reduce bimetallic effects (see Figure 1501.02.10).
A B C D E
BEFORE THIN THICKER AS "B" AS "D"
ANODISING ANODIC ANODIC COATING REANODISED BARRIER
FILM FILM STRIPPED TO RESTORE LAYER
DIMENSIONS METAL
DIMENSIONAL CHANGES ON COATING
FORMATION OF ANODIC FILM OF "B" ; THICKER MICROSTRUCTURE
OF ANODIC FILM
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Principles of Anodizing 1501.02.09
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies
TOTAL
RE IMMERSION
METAL COUPLED WITH HE
OSP RURAL SEVERE ATTACK
ALUMINIUM OR ATM MINIMAL ATTACK
ALUMINIUM ALLOY MARINE
MODERATE ATTACK
INDUSTRIAL
Au,Pt,Rh,Ag
Cu,Cu Alloys, "Ag" Solder
Solder on Steel,Cu Cathodic to Al which
Ni,Ni Alloys is corroded
Steel, Cast Iron
Pb,Sn
Sn/ Zn Plating on Steel
Al,Al Alloys Alloyed with Cu becomes more noble, with Zn less. AlZn alloys thus
without Cu or Zn used as protective cladding for stronger AlCu alloys
Cd Anodic to Al which
Zn,Zn Alloys is protected
Mg,Mg Base Alloys Attack on Al also
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Bi-Metallic Corrosion at Junction of
Training in Aluminium Ap plication Technolog ies Aluminium with other Metals 1501.02.10
TALAT 1501 16
Thermal Expansion
The coefficient of thermal expansion is non-linear over the range from minus 200 to plus
6000C but for practical purposes is assumed to be constant between the temperature range
from 20 to 1000C. The coefficient of thermal expansion of alloys is affected by the nature
of their constituents: the presence of silicon and copper reduces expansion while
magnesium increases it. For the common commercially used wrought alloys, the
coefficient of expansion varies from 23.5 x 10-6 /K for 4.6% Cu aluminium alloy to 24.5 x
10-6 /K for 4.5 % Mg aluminium alloy, i.e. twice that of steel.
Some high silicon cast alloys specially developed for the manufacture of internal
combustion engine pistons and cylinder heads have a coefficient of expansion as low as 16
x 10-6/K while in some aluminium metal matrix composites the coefficient is reduced to
12.2 x 10-6/K by the addition of 38% silicon carbide. Metal matrix composites are a
comparatively recent development, and Figure 1501.02.11 shows how the volume of
silicon carbide can be changed to tailor the coefficient of expansion to match the common
engineering metals.
20
COEFFICIENT OF THERMAL EXPANSION
VO
Brass 10% LU
ME
18
Bronze %
12% SI
LIC
Copper 15% ON
17% CA
16 Stainless Steel RB
I DE
IN
Monel AL
25% UM
14 IN
Nickel 29% I UM
MA
T
Iron, Mild Steel, Beryllium 34% RIX
12
Carbon Steel 38%
10
0 10 20 30 40
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Thermal Expansion Matching Using MMCs 1501.02.11
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies
TALAT 1501 17
frameworks. In these cases slip joints, plastic caulking and other stress-relieving devices
are usually needed (see Figure 1501.02.12). In cases where the structure is stiff and
unlikely to buckle such as an aluminium superstructure on a steel hulled ship all joints are
now made rigid and the differential expansion is accepted as a compressive or tensile
stress (Figure 1501.02.12).
.
Another form of dimensional change, which does not directly affect the user of aluminium
but is important in the production of castings, is the contraction of the metal on
solidification; this is dependant upon alloy and is between 1 and 2% (comparative figures
for iron, steel and brass are 1%, 2%, and 1.5%, respectively).
690 OVERALL
EXPANSION SLIDING
ZERO 56 56 56 56 JOINT
68
STRESS
C C 35
L
0 INDUCED TENSION
INDUCED COMPRESSION RIGID
JOINT
TRANSITION PIECE ALUMINIUM
- AREA TO BE WELD
PROTECTED -
ALUMINIUM
STEEL
LD
WE
STEEL
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Sliding and Rigid Joints of
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies Aluminium/ Steel Structures 1501.02.12
Melting Temperature
The melting point of aluminium is sensitive to purity, e.g. for 99.99% pure aluminium at
atmospheric pressure it is 6600C but this reduces to 6350C for 99.5% commercial pure
aluminium. The addition of alloying elements reduces this still further down to 5000C for
some magnesium alloys under certain conditions. The melting point increases with
pressure in a straight line relationship to 9800C at 50 kbar.
The difference between the melting points of two alloys of aluminium is used to advantage
in the manufacture of aluminium heat exchangers, where the fins are made from
aluminium-manganese (3103) or (3003) alloy clad with 5, 7.5% or 10% silicon alloy. The
assembled heat exchanger is heated to the temperature which will just melt the cladding
while allowing the core to remain solid; this causes the molten cladding alloy to flow by
TALAT 1501 18
capillary action to the joints which become structural on cooling (Figure 1501.02.13). The
highly controlled heating necessary in this brazing process is done using either a vacuum
furnace, controlled atmosphere furnace, or flux bath.
°C
626 MELTING POINT CORE
610 FURNACE TEMPERATURE +/- 3 SOLIDIFIED CLADDING
Al Si 10% CLADDING
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Brazing of Aluminium Using Clad Sheet 1501.02.13
Training in Aluminium Ap plication Technolog ies
Aluminium has a relatively high specific heat when compared with other metals on a
weight basis, i.e. 921 J/kg at 1000C which is higher than that of any common metal except
magnesium (1046); iron and steel are about 500 and copper and brass 377. On a volume
basis, however, the heat capacity of aluminium is less than any of the heavier metals.
TALAT 1501 19
− Aluminium alloys, ingots and casting
Aluminium is the backbone of the aerospace industry, is used to assist with cooking and
packaging, assist in the manufacture of high grade steel and is the base for a versatile
paint. Aluminium is a light and attractive metal exhibiting a high degree of corrosion
resistance in normal corrosive environments. It is also soft, hard, easy to weld, difficult to
weld, and a host of other seemingly conflicting characteristics.
If this sounds confused, it is. The properties of a particular aluminium product depend on
the alloy chosen. The term aluminium refers to a family of alloys. Knowledge of these
alloys is the key to the effective use of aluminium.
Outlined below is the family of aluminium alloys which are readily available
commercially.
TALAT 1501 20
Aluminium Alloy Designation System (CEN)
Major alloying Atoms Work Precipitation
element in solution hardening hardening
1XXX None (min. 99.00% Al) X
3XXX Mn X X Non-heat
4XXX Si X X treatable
WROUGHT 5XXX Mg X X alloys
ALLOYS*)
EN AW- 2XXX Cu X (X) X
6XXX Mg + Si X (X) X Heat
7XXX Zn X (X) X treatable
8XXX Other X (X) X alloys
1XXX0 None (min. 99.00% Al) *) letters preceding the alloy numbers
CASTING 2XXX0 Cu have the following meaning
ALLOYS*) 4XXX0 Si EN = European Standard
5XXX0 Mg A = Aluminium
EN AB-
7XXX0 Zn B = Ingot
EN AC- C = Cast Alloy
EN AM- 8XXX0 Sn
M = Master Alloy
9XXX0 Master Alloys W = Wrought Alloy
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The first of the four digits in the designation indicates the alloy group in terms of the major
alloying elements, viz,
1XXX Group. In this group for minimum purities of 99,00% and greater, the last
two of the four digits indicate the minimum percentage of
aluminium. For example, 1070 indicates aluminium purity of
99,70%.
TALAT 1501 21
2XXX to
8XXX Groups In these groups the last two of the four digits have no special
significance but serve only to identify the different alloys in the
group. The second digit indicates alloy modifications; if it is zero it
indicates the original alloy.
Alloy Systems
Figures 1501.03.02 - 05 inclusive show the relationship between the properties and
characteristics of the various alloy groupings. For instance, natural, unalloyed aluminium
possesses an ultimate tensile strength of about 70 Mpa which compares to 700 MPa and
above for some of the 7XXX series (Figure 1501.03.02).
Ductility (Elongation)
PROPERTY
CHEMICAL CODE Al Al Mn Al Mg Al Mg Si Al Zn Mg Al Cu Al Zn
Mg Si Mg Cu
STRENGTH Soft Low Medium Medium High High
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies Strength, Hardness, Impact Sensitivity and Ductility 1501.03.02
TALAT 1501 22
Alloy
Type 1XXX 3XXX 5XXX 6XXX 7XXX 2XXX 7XXX
Anodising
Weldability
PROPERTY
CHEMICAL CODE Al Al Mn Al Mg Al Mg Si Al Zn Mg Al Cu Al Zn
Mg Si Mg Cu
Alloy
1XXX 3XXX 5XXX 6XXX 7XXX 2XXX 7XXX
Type
Corrosion Resistance
PROPERTY
Fatigue Strength
CHEMICAL CODE Al Al Mn Al Mg Al Mg Si Al Zn Mg Al Cu Al Zn
Mg Si Mg Cu
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The Effects of Alloying Elements on
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies Corrosion Resistance and Fatigue Strength 1501.03.04
Alloy
1XXX 3XXX 5XXX 6XXX 7XXX 2XXX 7XXX
Type
Young's Modulus
PROPERTY
Density
CHEMICAL CODE Al Al Mn Al Mg Al Mg Si Al Zn Mg Al Cu Al Zn
Mg Si Mg Cu
STRENGTH Soft Low Medium Medium High High
TALAT 1501 23
Wrought aluminium alloys are those in which the cast ingot is mechanically worked by
processes such as rolling, drawing, extruding or forging, These alloys fall into several
groups; each group being distinguished by one main alloying constituent, as outlined in
further detail below. All wrought alloys are further divided into two general classes
namely the "heat-treatable" and "non-heat treatable" alloys.
Unalloyed Aluminium
Commercially pure aluminium (99.0% pure) is soft, ductile and of little structural value,
but as extracted it normally contains up to 1.5% impurities; mainly iron and silicon. These
have a marked effect on the properties of the metal, so that, with the further hardness
acquired during rolling, commercial purity aluminium has a useful degree of strength and
is widely produced in sheet form. It is very ductile in the annealed condition, has excellent
corrosion resistance and is ideal for use in the food and chemical industries. It is rolled to
foil thickness for use in food, confectionery and cigarette packaging and has even been
used for making shaped panels for vehicles where its high elongation was of prime
importance for the forming processes involved.
TALAT 1501 24
Aluminium - Copper Alloys
With copper as the principle element, these alloys require solution heat treatment to
achieve optimum mechanical properties, which can exceed that of mild steel.
Cu Si Mn Mg
4,0-4,58 0,6-0,9% 0,4-1,2% 0,5-0,9%
This group of alloys with additions such as Pb (X2030) or Pb + Bi (2011) give the best
machinability but there is a trend to avoid these additions because of potential scrap
contamination. Typical alloys in this group are 2017, 2024, 2014 X2030 and 2011.
Generally, these alloys have limited cold formability, except in the annealed condition, and
less corrosion resistance than other alloys; they are therefore generally anodised for
protection from aggressive environments. They are also more difficult to weld. Alloys in
this family are particularly useful for aircraft and military applications.
TALAT 1501 25
Aluminium - Magnesium Alloys
This series of alloys is non heat-treatable and exhibits the best combination of high
strength with resistance to corrosion (as indicated by its frequent use in marine/sea water
applications). This series also exhibits good weldability but when the Mg level exceed 3%
there is a tendency for stress corrosion resistance to be reduced, dependent on the temper
used and temperature of operation. Uses: pressure vessels, bulk road and rail vehicles,
ships structures, chemical plant.
This group of alloys exhibits the highest strength as far as aluminium is concerned and in
many cases they are superior to that of high tensile steels.
It is the combination of zinc and magnesium which makes the 7XXX alloys heat-treatable
and gives rise to their very high strength. A typical example here is 7075 with a
composition of:
Zn Mg Cu
5,0-6,0% 2,0-3,0% 1,0%-2,0%
giving a typical tensile strength of 580Mpa. This group of alloys is, however, relatively
difficult to fabricate and requires a very high degree of technology to produce. It is mainly
used in military applications.
TALAT 1501 26
Aluminium - plus other elements which do not fall into any of the patterns outlined
above
a totally mixed bag of alloys ranging from 8011 for bottle capping to 8091 for Lithium
alloy aircraft sheet.
The new European reference for alloys will be identified with the preface EN followed by
a blank space followed by A which indicates aluminium then B,C, or M which indicate
respectively ingots for re-melting, casting or master alloys.
The cast alloy numbering system for Europe, Figure 1501.03.01, will use a five figure
format as follows:
Unalloyed Aluminium
The first of the five figures in the designation system is the number 1 (as used in wrought
aluminium for aluminium for aluminium 99,00% minimum and greater).
The second of the five figures in the designation system is the number 0.
The third and fourth figures indicate the minimum aluminium percentage. They are the
same as the two figures to the right of the decimal point in the minimum percentage, when
it is expressed to the nearest 0.01 percent.
For a given alloy, ingot and casting have the same numerical designation. The first of the
five figures in the designations indicates the major alloying element and is the same as that
used in the wrought aluminium system.
- Copper 2XXX
TALAT 1501 27
- Silicon 4XXX
- Magnesium 5XXX
- Zinc 7XXX
The second of the five figures in the designation indicates the alloy group.
-2 1 XXX : A1Cu
-4 1 XXX : A1SiMgTi
-4 2 XXX : A1Si7Mg
-4 3 XXX : AlSi10Mg
-4 4 XXX : A1Si
-4 5 XXX : AlSiCu
-4 6 XXX : AlSi9Cu
-4 8 XXX : AlSiCuNiMg
-5 1 XXX : AlMg
-7 1 XXX : AlZnMg
TALAT 1501 28
1501.04 Basic Physical Metallurgy
• Work hardening
• Dispersion hardening
• Solid solution hardening
• Precipitation hardening
• Temper designations non heat-treatable alloys
• Temper designations heat-treatable alloys
• Common alloys and applications
There are four basic ways in which aluminium can be strengthened: work hardening,
dispersion hardening, solid solution hardening and precipitation hardening.
These hardening processes are effective because they produce conditions that impede the
movement of dislocations. Dislocations are faults that enable metal crystals to slip at
stresses very much below those that would be required to move two perfect crystal planes
past one another.
Work Hardening
Whenever aluminium products are fabricated by rolling, extruding, drawing, bending, etc.,
work is done on the metal. When work is done below the metal's recrystallisation
temperature (cold work), it not only forms the metal, but also increases it strength due to
the fact that dislocations trying to glide on different slip planes interact causing a "traffic
jam" that prevents them from moving. Fabricating processes carried out above the metal's
recrystallization temperature (hot work) do not normally increase strength over the
annealed strength condition.
With non heat-treatable wrought alloys, cold work is the only way of increasing strength.
With heat treatable alloy, cold work applied after heat treating can increase strength still
further. Work hardening of non heat treatable aluminium magnesium and pure aluminium
alloy is shown in Figure 1501.04.01.
TALAT 1501 29
300
DEFORMATION OF
ULTIMATE 250 STRENGTH ALUMINIUM GRAIN
TENSILE UNDER PRESSURE
STRENGTH 200 STRONG ALLOYS
N/ mm2
150
COMMERCIALLY
100
PURE ALUMINIUM
50
40
COMMERCIALLY
30 PURE ALUMINIUM
ELONGATION
% ON 50 mm DUCTILITY
20
10
STRONG ALLOYS
0
0 20 40 60 80
SLIP PLANES
% REDUCTION IN AREA BY COLD WORK
alu
Dispersion Hardening
Fine particles of an insoluble material are uniformly distributed throughout the cristal
lattice in such a way as to impede the movement of dislocations (eg 3000 series). With
aluminium, dispersion-hardening may be achieved in two ways:
− by the addition of alloying elements that combine chemically with the metal or each
other to form fine particles that precipitate from the matrix
Most alloys are solid solutions of one or more metals dissolved in another metal: either the
alloying of atoms take over the lattice positions of some of the base-metal atoms
(substitutional solid solutions) or they occupy spaces in the lattice between the base-metal
(interstitial solid solutions). In both cases, the base-metal lattice is distorted, retarding the
movement of dislocations and hence strengthening the metal. The 5000 series with
magnesium as the solute is a good example.
Most aluminium alloys reflect some solid solution hardening as a result of one or more
elements being dissolved in the aluminium base, each element's contribution to the
strength of the alloy is roughly additive. Usually these alloys are further strengthened by
heat treatment or by work hardening.
TALAT 1501 30
Precipitation Hardening
Precipitation hardening is a two stage heat treatment. It can be applied only to those
groups of alloys which are heat treatable (i.e. 2000, 6000 and 7000 wrought series).
Firstly, a supersaturated condition is produced by solution heat treatment. Secondly the
"ageing" process that occurs after quenching may be accelerated by heating the alloy until
a second and coherent phase is precipitated. This coherent phase strengthens the alloys by
obstructing the movements of dislocations.
Solution treatment involves heating the alloy to a temperature just below the lowest
melting point of the alloy system, holding at this temperature until the base metal dissolves
a significant amount of the alloying elements (Figure 1501.04.02). The alloy is then
rapidly cooled to retain as much of the alloying elements in solution as possible and so
produce a supersaturated solid solution. This supersaturated condition is usually unstable
and therefore heat-treatable alloys are used in this condition, i.e. T4.
°C
800 SOLUTION HEAT TREATMENT
TEMPERATURE
LIQUID
700
LIQUID: and SOLID SLOW
SOLUTION
600 CuAl2 COOLING
SOLID SOLUTION of
ALUMINIUM and COPPER RAPID
500 COOLING
400
COALESCED
OVER- CuAl2
AGING Al
300
SOLID SOLUTION of
200 ALUMINIUM and COPPER
with PARTICLES of CuAl2
AGING
100 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
SUPER- Al + CuAl2 PRECIPITATE
% Cu SATURATED
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Metallurgy of Precipitacion Hardening
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies (e.g Al -Cu System) 1501.04.02
TALAT 1501 31
Heating above room temperature accelerates the precipitation reaction, in practice,
therefore, precipitation-hardened alloys are usually ″artificially aged' (precipitation heat
treated) to develop maximum properties as quickly as possible. The temperature range
within which control of the precipitation reactions is feasible is 120-180°C. The actual
temperature depends on such variables as the alloy, the properties desired and production
schedule.
325
185 °C
300
UTS
MPa 200 °C
170 °C
275
SOAKING
TEMPERATURE
215 °C
250
225
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
SOAKING TIME (HOURS)
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Ageing-Curves for Aluminium Alloy 6082 1501.04.03
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies
These are alloys in which the mechanical properties may be enhanced by the amount of
cold work introduced after the last annealing operation. The properties so obtained will be
reduced by subsequent heating and cannot be restored except by additional cold work.
TALAT 1501 32
In the non heat-treatable alloys there are generally six available tempers (Figure
1501.04.04). It should be remembered, however, that all tempers are not always available
for all alloys. The most common tempers range from annealed, designated by ″0″, to the
full-hard tempers designated by temper HX8. The term H8 refers to the maximum amount
of cold work which is commercially practical for the particular alloy. An alloy in the HX8
condition will exhibit a 75% increase in strength over the same alloy in the ″0″ condition.
Between the annealed and the HX8 state there are generally three intermediate levels of
hardness referred to as:
Products are produced in the ″F″ temper, are defined as "as fabricated". ″F″ represents an
undefined strength enhancement above the annealed state ″0″.
XXXX -F as-fabricated
-O annealed
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A Selection of Common Temper Designations for
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies Aluminium Alloys 1501.04.04
These are alloys in which the mechanical properties may be changed by heat treatment.
Heat is used to enhance strength but can also be used to decrease strength through
annealing to assist with forming; these alloys can also be re-heat-treated after annealing or
forming to restore their original properties, This is a major difference compared with non
heat-treatable alloys (Figure 1501.04.04).
TALAT 1501 33
The major tempers in this area are designated and defined according to international
standards (AA, ISO, CEN):
0 Fully annealed
T3 Solution heat-treated, cold worked out, naturally aged
T4 Solution heat-treated and naturally aged
T5 Cooled from an elevated temperature shaping process and
then artificially aged
T6 Solution heat-treated, artificially aged
T8 Solution heat-treated, cold worked and artificially aged
The T4 is produced by "solution heat treatment" which, as mentioned previously, consists
of heating the alloy to a predetermined temperature just below its melting point, at which
point some of the alloy constituents dissolve and are then taken into what is referred to as
"solid solution". To ensure that this situation is maintained the material is quenched
rapidly. An example of this is 2014 where the temperature is raised to 500°C ± 5% before
quenching in water.
The following list gives a brief survey of commonly used aluminium alloys, their
characteristics and common uses:
TALAT 1501 34
corrosion resistant. applications below 65°C.
Shipbuilding structures in general.
Non-heat-treatable. Good
weldability and corrosion resistance.
*6063 Very resistant to sea water, industrial E
atmospheres. A superior alloy for Architectural extrusions (internal and
cryogenic use (in annealed condition) external) window frames, irrigation
pipes.
*6061/ Heat-treatable. Medium strength S.P.E
*6082 alloy. Good weldability and
corrosion resistance. Used for Stressed structural members, bridges,
*6005 intricate profiles. cranes, roof trusses, beer barrels E
A
Heat-treatable. Medium strength. Thin wall wide extrusions
Good weldability and corrosion
resistance.
P.E
7020 Heat-treatable. Properties very
similar to 6082. Preferable as air- Armoured vehicles, military bridges,
quenchable, therefore has less motor cycle and bicycle frames
distortion problems. Not notch-
sensitive.
E.P
7075 Heat-treatable. Age-hardens
naturally, therefore will recover Airframes
properties in heat-affected zone after
welding. Susceptible to stress
corrosion. Good ballistic deterrent
properties.
Some differences in properties and characteristics for the different alloys and alloy groups
can also be appreciated from Figures 1501.03.02 till 05.
TALAT 1501 35
1501.05 Aluminium Alloys ; Mechanical Properties
• Tensile strength
• Strength/weight ratio
• Proof stress
• Elastic properties
• Elongation
• Compression
• Bearing
• Shear
• Hardness
• Ductility
• Creep
• Properties at elevated temperatures
• Properties at low temperatures
• Impact strength
• Fracture characteristics
• Fatigue
Tensile Strength
Strength/Weight Ratio
As can be seen from Figure 1501.05.01 the high tensile steels have the highest strengths
of all the metals. These are followed by Titanium and the aircraft aluminium alloys and
some way below these the commercial structural alloys 5083-H12 and 6082-T6. If we
now consider the strength available for a given mass by dividing the tensile strength by
the density we get quite a different picture (Figure 1501.05.02). We now find the 7075
at the top with the commercial structural alloys moving to the mid range above the
common mild steel.
TALAT 1501 36
1200 HIGH TENSILE STEEL - ALLOY
1100
1000
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 STRAIN %
STEEL - ALLOY
MAGNESIUM AECMA MG -P-61
STRESS = N/mm²
DENSITY g/cm³
MILD STEEL
COPPER HARD DRAWN
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 STRAIN %
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Density-Related Strength of Aluminium in
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies Comparision with Various Metals and Alloys 1501.05.02
Proof Stress
With mild steel there is a clearly defined point on the stress strain curve at which the
elastic limit is reached; this ″yield point″ is followed by a sharp reduction in the stress
before the metal exhibits a plastic flow region with stress again increasing with strain
until the ultimate stress is reached and the stress reduces to the point of failure.
TALAT 1501 37
In most cases no clearly defined elastic limit or yield point is to be seen on stress/strain
curves for aluminium alloys, this is apparent by looking at Figure 1501.05.03. For this
reason the point of departure from the elastic range has to be defined arbitrarily. For
convenience in routine testing, a point is chosen at which the permanent deformation is
easily measured: at one time, a permanent set of 0.1% of the original gauge length was
used. Today, however, 0.2% is the international norm.
The stress at which a 0.2% set is observed is called the ″0.2% proof stress″ and, because
it reveals the onset of plastic movement, is often of more value to the designer than the
ultimate stress. Figure 1501.05.03 shows how it is obtained from a stress/strain
diagram.
500
ALUMINIUM
0.2% STRAIN LIMIT
400 STEEL
UPPER
STRESS YIELD
MPa LIMIT
300
200
100
A B C
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Plastic Yield Behaviour of Aluminium and Mild Steel 1501.05.03
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies
Some alloys, notably the heavily strain-hardened ones, have a high ratio of proof
strength to ultimate stress; in 1200 H8 for example the 0.2% proof stress is 140 MPa
and the ultimate stress 150 MPa. Generally, the ratio of proof to ultimate varies from
40% for soft tempers to 95% for the hardest; in the fully heat treated alloys it is about
85%. Although a high proof stress is in itself an advantage, a high proof stress/ultimate
stress ratio implies a low ductility.
Where strain is the criterion for design, it follows that the imposed stress would be one
third in an aluminium member compared to one in steel. If we compare the curves for a
similar strength aluminium and steel (shown in Figure 1501.05.03) and consider a
0.1% strain by drawing a vertical line at A the stress in the steel is 200 MPa whereas in
the aluminium is only 66.6 MPa. It can also be seen from the graph that a strain of 0.3%
(line B) is necessary to induce the same stress in the aluminium member. It is also worth
noting that the aluminium represented by the curve in Figure 1501.05.03 would still be
TALAT 1501 38
in the elastic range at 0.38% strain (line C) while the steel subjected to the same rate of
strain would have entered the plastic range.
The area under the tensile stress-strain curve to the point of failure provides a measure
of the capacity of a material to absorb energy under simple tensile loading.
Elastic Properties
From Figure 1501.05.03 it can be seen that for the initial part of the stress-strain curve
the strain per unit increase of stress is much higher for aluminium than for steel,
measurement shows that it is three times higher. The slope of this part of the curve
determines the Modulus of Elasticity (Young’s Modulus) e.g. stress divided by strain. It
follows therefore that the Modulus of Elasticity for aluminium is one-third that of steel,
being between 65500 and 72400 MPa for most aluminium alloys.
From the information already given it is clear that when a steel structural member is
replaced by one of identical form in an aluminium alloy the weight will be one third but
the elastic deflection will be about three times as large. From this we can deduce that an
aluminium member of identical dimension to one in steel will absorb three times as
much energy, but only up to the point where the stress in the aluminium remains below
the limit of proportionality.
It is worth noting that stiffness is defined as the product of the Modulus of Elasticity and
the Moment of Inertia of a section (E x I) and it is this which determines the deflection
when subjected to a bending load. This allows the application of another attribute of
aluminium, its ability to be made into a variety of complex structural shapes by
extrusion. The extrusion process provides the designer with the opportunity to shape the
metal to achieve maximum efficiency in the design of a section usually by making it
deeper. However, making a section deeper often sacrifices some of the potential weight
saving with the result that it only weighs about half that of the steel member instead of
a third.
Figure 1501.05.04 shows two different approaches of saving weight when using
aluminium instead of steel for the main beams of a road trailer. All sections have the
same bending stiffness, the aluminium 'I' beam has been designed with a maximum
overall extrusion dimension and minimum extrusion thickness, while the aluminium
box beam has been designed to the same width as the steel beam but with additional
special features to improve the build. The aluminium I beam exhibits an improved
section modulus and consequently a lower induced stress in bending in addition to a
57% weight saving, but because of its slender shape has inherent poor torsional stability.
The aluminium box beam exhibits an even greater improvement in section modulus
combined with a considerable improvement in torsional stability but only a 33% weight
saving. By changing the design any combination of characteristics inside the practical
manufacturing limits can be obtained.
TALAT 1501 39
Young#s Modulus can vary by as much as 40% with the addition of up to 15%
Manganese but for commercial alloys it only varies one or two percent and this variation
is ignored in standard structural calculations.
EXTRUSION DESIGNED
110 165 FOR EASE OF BENDING 110
OF CHASSIS NECK
TORSIONAL
STIFFNESS 1 0.24 27.5
FACTOR
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Stiffness-Weight Relationsship as Design Criteria
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies Example: Trailer Chassis 1501.05.04
The Torsional Modulus or Modulus of Rigidity of aluminium e.g. shear stress divided
by angular strain is again about a third of that for steel being 26000 MPa for aluminium
compared to 82700 Mpa for steel. The same rules should therefore be applied by the
designer when looking at aluminium designs in torsion as in bending.
Elongation
The amount of permanent stretch at the instant of breaking is a useful guide to the
ductility of a metal, and a minimum value is usually demanded by standard
specifications. It is not, however, an infallible index of workability and selection of an
alloy for forming operations should never be made on this basis alone.
″Elongation″ may be found by clamping the pieces of a broken test specimen together
and measuring between marks applied before starting the test. It is generally expressed
as a percentage of the original gauge length of the test specimen. Elongation is not equal
everywhere in the specimen but is greatest around the fracture; the gauge length chosen
will therefore greatly influence the value, and is always specified.
A gauge length of 50 mm is a common standard. For better comparison of different
sized specimens, the length may be referred to the original cross-sectional area. A
TALAT 1501 40
gauge length of 5.65 √A (A = cross section area, equivalent to 5 diameters for round
specimens) is used.
Typical elongation values for wrought aluminium alloys at ambient temperature vary
from 35% (on 50mm) in annealed material to as little as 3% in fully strain-hardened
metal. The heat- treated alloys possess elongations ranging from 5% to 20%. Figure
1501.05.05 shows the typical elongation range of various aluminium alloys at ambient
temperature.
The elongation of most alloys increases with test temperature and this property has been
extended by the development of special superplastic alloys with elongations as high as
1000% when stretched at an elevated temperature (Figure 1501.05.05). Stretching metal
at elevated temperatures over die forms using pressurised air is termed superplastic
forming and combines the mechanical integrity of metals with the design freedom to
produce complicated shapes previously only possible with plastics. In order to make the
process work the material must exhibit high tensile ductility at low strain rates.
For cast alloys the elongation values can be as low as 2% and are often seen as the
limiting factor in their application.
% ELONGATION
TYPICAL RANGE
40
MALE TOOL
COMPRESSED AIR
GAUGE STRETCHED
30 LENGTH LENGTH
MALE TOOL
20
10
STRENGTH
(A
(A
lM
(A
(A
(A
(A
(A
(A
l M ) 60
l M 14
lM
l)
lC
lM
g)
lM
12
u)
50
g)
n)
g
00
Zn 2
Zn
83
Si
52
20
31
)7
Cu
51
03
00
)7
8
07
5
Compression
The behaviour of aluminium alloys under compressive loading does not receive the
attention given to tensile properties, perhaps because the strength of structural members
TALAT 1501 41
is so often limited by buckling, and the actual compressive strength of the metal is not
approached (Figure 1501.05.06).
For most engineering purposes it is customary to use the same design stress for
compressive work as for tensile. In the testing machine, an aluminium alloy will show
an apparently higher strength in compression than in tension, but this can in part be
attributed to the changing cross-sectional areas of the specimens, increasing in one case
and decreasing in the other, while the stress is based on the original area. Cylindrical
specimens of the softer aluminium alloys can be compressed to thick discs before
cracking, and even then may still sustain the load. The harder alloys show a more
definite failure point and pronounced cracking.
A proof stress, at which there is a small measurable departure from the elastic range, is
therefore usually quoted, and will be roughly equal to the corresponding tensile proof
stress; in cast or forged metal it is usually slightly higher. Sheet and extruded products,
however, are often straightened by stretching, an effect of which is to lower the
compressive proof stress and raise the tensile proof stress by small amounts.
Bearing
TALAT 1501 42
COMPRESSION CASES
STRENGTH P P
MPa
BRINEL STRESS
HARDNESS
600 BRINEL 150
HARDNESS L
P P
300 75 BEARING
ULTIMATE d
SHEAR
STRENGTH
200 50 t
STRESS = P
P dt P
100 25 P
SHEAR
d
1200
5251
5083
6082
7004
2014
7075
3103
STRESS = 4 P
π d2
P
alu Compression, Shear, Bearing Strength
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies and Hardness for Different Aluminium Alloys 1501.05.06
Shear
In the wrought alloys the ratio of ultimate sheer stress to ultimate tensile stress varies
with composition and method of fabrication from about 0.5 to 0.75. When test results
are not available, a ratio of 0.55 is safe for most purposes (Figure 1501.05.06).
Rivets in low and medium strength alloys, with shear strengths up to 200 MPa can be
driven cold. Small rivets in stronger alloys can be driven in the soft state immediately
following solution treatment and, on natural age-hardening, shear strengths up to 260
MPa will be developed.
Hardness
TALAT 1501 43
Ductility
We have said the elongation of a tensile test piece at fracture is a useful but not a
conclusive key to the ductility of an alloy.
Simple bend tests are widely used as a further indication of workability. A strip of
metal with smooth rounded edges is bent through 90° or 180° by hand or mallet over a
steel former of prescribed radius. By using successively tighter formers, a minimum
bend radius, at which there is no cracking, can be found, and is usually quoted as a
multiple of sheet thickness ″t″, for example, 1½ t.
To obtain a measure of ductility a sample of sheet that is intended for deep drawing or
pressing is often subjected to the Erichsen cupping test in which a hemispherical punch
is forced by a hand-operated screw against one side of the sheet, stretching the metal
into a dome or cup (Figure 1501.05.07). The depth of penetration at fracture gives an
indication of the amenability of the metal to deep drawing processes involving
stretching, though not necessarily to other pressing operations.
Much of the value of this test lies in its ability to show up to two phenomena that will
prevent successful drawing: a coarse grain structure produces roughness of the cup
surface and perhaps an early failure through local thinning; and directionality or
variation of properties in relation to the direction of rolling affects the shape of the
fracture, which should be circular.
ANNEALED
15 H 12
H 14
DEPTH OF DRAW ( D ), MM
H 18
FULLY HARD 10 mm SPHERICAL
10
RADIUS
CLAMP
5 t D
FOR COMMERCIALLY PURE
ALUMINIUM 1200
0
0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0
SHEET THICKNESS ( t ),MM
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Erichsen Cupping Test: Effect of Sheet Thickness 1501.05.07
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies
TALAT 1501 44
Creep
The creep strength of metals reduces as the operating temperature increases, again
aluminium's behaviour is the same as other metals. It follows, therefore, that Creep
strength cannot be expressed by a single number but must be related to operating
temperatures, time and amount of deformation. Figure 1501.05.08 illustrates these
relationships for an Al-Cu alloy.
These data are important to the designer of a structure which is subject to stress and
temperature, such as hot tarmac carrying vehicles (required life 1000's hrs), some forms
of pressure vessels used in process plant (required life 100,000 hrs). It may also be
necessary for predicting the life of a structure in hazard situations such as a safety
critical structure surrounded by a fire (30 mins), or even a very short rupture life as
maybe required in a rocket shell (2 mins). In all of these cases the time to failure at a
given stress level and temperature is the design criterion, and the data are usually
applied with a suitable safety allowance on time.
STRAIN, %
FAILURE
0.8
D
200 °C
0.6
C
CURVES FOR AN
0.4 AlCu ALLOY
B STRESSED AT 110 MPa
175 °C
A
0.2 150 °C
0
0 100 200 300 400 500
TIME - HOURS
alu
Creep Curves for an Aluminium-Copper
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies Alloy Stressed at 110 MPa 1501.05.08
TALAT 1501 45
The information available to the designer is generally the result of tests on tensile
specimens subjected to constant stress at a carefully controlled temperature. By loading
a number of specimens at different stress levels and constant temperature, or at different
temperatures and a constant stress, perhaps for some thousands of hours, a family of
curves can be obtained of the form shown in the graph Figure 1501.05.08. In each of
these curves, deformation increases in four stages: first elastically, on loading (O to A
on the top curve); secondly (A to B), at a decreasing rate; thirdly (B to C), at an almost
constant rate, which may be negligibly small at low stresses and temperatures; and lastly
(C to D), at an increasing rate which leads to failure. In this example, only the top curve
has entered the final stage. The graph indicates the ways open to the designer to interpret
the data. One route is to limit the total creep at a given temperature to say 0.1% in
10,000 hrs resulting in an allowable working stress. Another is to limit the working
stress to a level at which the final stage of the creep curve will not be entered during the
intended life of the product, and at which the total deformation at the end of this time
will be within acceptable limits. Either of these methods can be applied to proposed
applications.
The time taken to produce creep data can be very protracted and it is usually considered
impractical to continue creep and creep rupture tests beyond a few thousand hours.
However, designers of pressure vessels require data that will indicate rupture at 100,000
hrs and it is therefore necessary to extrapolate the available data. Several methods have
been devised for making such extrapolations, notably those by Larson and Miller,
White, Clark and Wilson, Manson and Haferd and Orr, Sherby and Dorn.
The strength of aluminium alloys decreases with the increase in temperature excluding
the effects of age-hardening within narrow temperature ranges for various holding
periods. The time of exposure is important in the case of cold worked or heat-treated
alloys (Figure 1501.05.09) but has little or no effect on the properties of annealed
alloys. The heating time at test temperature is often quoted as 10,000 hrs, but with the
time-temperature dependence of strength it may be necessary for other exposure times to
be considered.
Shear, compression, bearing and fatigue strengths vary with temperature in much the
same way as tensile strength; ratios of these strengths to tensile strength may be taken as
constant.
TALAT 1501 46
% of ROOM TEMPERATURE TENSILE STRENGTH
140 10,000 hr
120 1,000 hr
100 100 hr
80
10 hr
60
1/2 hr
40
20
0
-400 -200 0 200 400 600
TEMPERATURE in °C
alu
alu
Tensile Strength of 2014-T6 at Test Temperatures 1501.05.09
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies
60 1/2 hr
50
40
30
50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400
TEMPERATURE °C
TALAT 1501 47
The modulus of elasticity of aluminium alloys also decreases as the operating
temperature increases but unlike strengths which stabilise at a lower annealed value, the
modulus of elasticity returns to its room temperature value after exposure (Figure
1501.05.11).
Al Cu
80
60
Al Mg Si
40
-300 -200 -100 0 100 200 300 400 500
TEMPERATURE °C
alu
Modulus of Elasticity of Aluminium at
1501.05.11
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies Various Temperatures
Aluminium and its alloys have no ductile to brittle transition at low temperatures,
indeed, their strengths increase with decreasingtemperature. The strengths of stable
temper aluminium alloys are not influenced by the time of exposure at low temperatures
neither are the strengths at room temperature after exposure at low
temperature.However, freshly solution treated heat treatable alloys can be held in this
condition for long periods by storing them at a low temperature because of the
retardation of the ageing process. This is used to good effect when placing aircraft rivets
of the AlCuMgSi type which may be solution treated prior to use by heating to 4950C
for a period of time between 5 and 60 minutes, depending upon the size and quantity of
rivets being processed, after which they are quenched in cold water. The rivets remain
soft after quenching for up to two hours at ambient, but at minus 50C this is extended to
forty-five hours and at minus 150C to one hundred and fifty hours.
TALAT 1501 48
magnesium content (4.5% and above) begin to reduce again but not below the ambient
figure.
Shear, compression and bearing strengths - all improve at low temperatures, also the
moduli of elasticity under tensile, compressive and shear loading are 12% higher at
minus 1960C than at room temperature.
MPa
700
600
500
400
UTS
PS 0.2
300
200
Impact Strength
As already indicated the low elastic modulus of aluminium alloys is an asset when a
structure is subjected to shock-loading conditions: an aluminium alloy member will
absorb three times as much energy before permanent damage occurs than a steel
member of equal moment of inertia and strength.
Energy absorption figures from tests or notched specimens in Izod or Charpy pendulum
machines are, as with other metals, not directly applicable to design work. Again, the
results from different alloys of aluminium are so varied and so unrelated to performance
under structural conditions, that this type of test is little used.
Fracture Characteristics
TALAT 1501 49
sudden failure would be catastrophic. Elongation and reduction of area from tensile tests
and the ratio of yield to tensile strength, both give indications of fracture characteristics,
but for the engineer these indications are seldom sufficient to be used alone as a basis
for design.
Charpy and Izod notched bar impact tests have been widely employed to determine the
transition temperatures for ferritic steels, i.e. temperatures at which the alloys begin to
exhibit brittle fracture characteristics, but these tests are generally unsuitable for
aluminium and its alloys because the latter do not exhibit a transition temperature. Also
notched bar impact test values for aluminium alloys are almost constant from ambient
down to temperatures of minus 2680C; in addition most wrought alloys are so tough the
test bars do not fracture. Therefore no useful data are obtained.
To overcome this problem an adaption of the Navy tear test, originally developed by
Noah Kahn to investigate the sudden failures of welded steel ships, is often employed to
assess a fracture rating factor for aluminium and its alloys. In this test the energies
required to initiate and propagate a crack in a specially prepared test piece (Figure
1501.05.13) are obtained by calculating the appropriate areas under the load extension
curve. The energy required to propagate a crack in the tear test divided by the net cross
sectional area of the specimen is referred to as the "unit propagation energy". It
provides a measure of tear resistance and, indirectly, a measure of fracture toughness.
The unit propagation energy obtained from the test can be related directly to the strain
energy release rate for alloys that conform to the fracture mechanics theory, thereby
providing a realistic measure of the resistance to rapid crack propagation.
Test procedures have also been developed which relate the fracture strength of a
material to a flaw or crack size or specific design detail, thereby providing a measure of
"fracture toughness". Fracture toughness can be described as the resistance of a material
to unstable crack propagation at elastic stresses, or to low ductility fracture of any kind.
Testing for fracture toughness requires the initiation of a crack of known length in a
specially prepared test piece either by fatigue loading but usually by cutting a very thin
slot followed by loading in the same manner as the Navy tear test (Figure 1501.05.13),.
A relationship between the stress intensity factor K, uniform gross tensile stress σa, and
the length of the crack 2a is given by K = σa 2π a . The stress intensity factor K (at the
onset of unstable crack propagation) decreases with the increase in metal thickness and
approaches a constant minimum value which is identified as KIc the "critical elastic
stress intensity factor".or the plain strain fracture toughness. KIc is analogous to yield
stress since it is the minimum stress intensity at which failure can start at a given
temperature and at full thickness for plain strain conditions. The fracture toughness
route is not suitable for highly ductile alloys since they do not exhibit rapid crack
propagation under elastic conditions. The test is therefore usually confined to the high
strength heat treatable alloys.
TALAT 1501 50
TEAR TEST PIECE
25 mm 11 mm
t
LOAD, N
57mm
Maximum load
Root
Radius
Division between
crack initation
and
propagation 36 mm
FRACTURE TOUGHNESS
TEST PIECE
0.5W
1.25W
W
INITATION PROPAGATION
1.2W 0.55W
DEFORMATION, mm
LOW TEAR HIGH TEAR
RESISTANCE RESISTANCE
0.45W
alu
Tear-Test Specimen and Load Deformation Curves 1501.05.13
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies
The ability to resist the growth of cracks remains high for most aluminium alloys even
at very low temperatures and in the case of 6061 T6 increases considerably (Figure
1501.05.14). For most aluminium alloys the ability to deform plastically and resist crack
growth is so great that unstable crack growth in elastically stressed material (brittle
fracture) is impossible.
TALAT 1501 51
UNIT PROPOGATION ENERGY mm-N/mm² or mm-Mpa
0.4
Alloy 6061 T6
0.3
0.1
Alloy 7075-T73
Alloy 2014 T6
0
-250 -200 -150 -100 -50 0 50
TEMPERATURE °C
DATA FROM TEAR TESTS ON 0.063 IN. SHEET IN THE TRANSVERSE DIRECTION
NOTCH-YIELD RATIO
(Notch Tensile Strength / Yield Stress)
2.5 5454-0
2
5083-H321
1.5
2014-T651
1
7075-T651
0.5 CYLINDRICAL SPECIMENS
NOTCH TIP RADIUS > 0.025 mm
Kt > 14
0
-250 -200 -150 -100 -50 0 50 100
TEMPERATURE °C
Fatigue
(see also TALAT Lectures 2400)
In common with other metals aluminium will fracture when subjected to variable or
repeated loads at stress levels considerably lower than it would be the case with static
loads. This type of failure which consists of the formation of cracks under the action of
the fluctuating loads is known as fatigue. The fluctuating loads in practice could be
caused by live loads, vibration or repeated temperature changes. The direction in which
TALAT 1501 52
the fatigue crack propagates is always perpendicular to the line of action of the stresses
causing the crack. As the crack progresses the stress on the residual cross section
increases so that there is a corresponding increase in the rate of crack propagation.
Ultimately a stage is reached when the remaining area is insufficient to support the
applied load and final rupture occurs. Fatigue cracks may be very difficult to detect
since unlike tensile failures there is no visible surface contraction at the point of failure.
The number of stress cycles is usually known or can be established by the designer for a
given application.
The stress cycle is fully defined provided that any two of these four quantities are
known. Figure 1501.05.16 shows these factors relating to typical stress cycle patterns.
Machines have been developed to apply these various types of loading rapidly and
easily. A simple and well known example is the Wöhler machine, in which a cylindrical
specimen is arranged as a beam or a cantilever under a steady load. Rotation of the
specimen subjects it to sinusoidal alternating loading cycles. The AMSLER test
machine has been developed to provide high speed tensile and compression loading of
specimens to a specified wave form.
The effect of the mean stress or superimposed stress on the stress cycle is shown in
Figure 1501.05.17. As can be seen an imposed tensile stress reduces the number of
cycles to cause failure while an imposed compressive stress increases the cycles.
TALAT 1501 53
F MAX
CYCLE MOTOR FLEXIBLE MAIN CANTILEVER TIME +
COUNTER COUPLING BEARING BEARING
SPECIMEN MEAN STRESS
= ZERO
1 STRESS -
F MIN
CYCLE
STRESS PATTERN AT A POINT ON OUTER SURFACE
ROTATING CANTILEVER W OF ROTATING BAR
FATIGUE TESTING MACHINE
SIMPLE FATIGUE
STRESS
TIME
VARIABLE TENSILE MACHINE
1 STRESS CYCLE
LOAD CURVE SHAPE
t/5 max
t
STRESS
RANGE
154
MPa
F Max
77
+ 38.5
MEAN
STRESS
- 38.5
F Min
CYCLES 5 5 5 5 5 6 8
10 1.1 x 10 2 x 10 6 x 10 8 x 10 2 x 10 10
to FAILURE
Unlike creep testing, fatigue testing can be speeded up; the results are not prejudiced
until frequencies of the order of 500 Hz are approached. This enables many millions of
cycles to be applied in a practical time. Loads applied at resonant frequency,
mechanically or electrically excited can often be used to save power.
The usual procedure in fatigue testing is to test a number of specimens at different stress
levels. By plotting, in each case, the stress to cause failure, a stress/number (S/N) curve
is obtained of the type shown in Figure 1501.05.18. It will be seen that the S/N curve
for steel flattens out eventually, implying that there is a level of stress below which the
TALAT 1501 54
material will never fail. This stress is its ″fatigue limit″. Most aluminium alloys, like
other non-ferrous metals do not show this limit, (exceptions are provided by the
aluminium magnesium 5000 series alloys) so it is necessary to quote the maximum
stress permissible for a specified life: 50 million cycles is a widely used figure for
aluminium alloys.
30
27
24
Al Cu ALLOY 2014A T6
18 ENDURANCE STRENGTH
AT 50 MILLION CYCLES
15
10 5 10 6 10 7 10 8 10 9
ENDURANCE - CYCLES
The fatigue, proof and tensile strengths of a number of aluminium alloys are shown
plotted and compared in Figure 1501.05.19. The fatigue strengths were determined
from rotating-beam tests at five hundred million cycles using polished specimens.
The fatigue resistance will be considerably reduced by local stress raisers such as sharp
grooves, shoulders abrupt changes in profile or even machining marks and scratches.
This is particularly the case when the surface imperfection or stress raisers run across
the direction of the stress field. These details produce small zones of intensified stress
which have a far greater influence on the fatigue strength than the differences which can
be attributed to the application of different alloys. Design and manufacture are therefore
always the key elements in influencing the fatigue resistance of a component or
structure.
TALAT 1501 55
Alloy and Temper
Fatigue
7075 - T6
Proof
Ultimate
2014 - T6
7004 - T6A
6061 - T6
7004 - T4A
5083 - H11
6061 - T4
3003 - H14 Fatigue Strength
5454 - 0 500,000,000 cycles
Polished specimens
3003 - 0
alu
Fatigue, Proof and Ultimate Tensile Strengths
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies of some Wrought Aluminium Alloys 1501.05.19
These last statements are particularly true when considering welded fabrications and
they hold true both for aluminium and steel. There are three major factors responsible
for the low fatigue strength of welded joints.
Profile:
A weld produces a surface discontinuity, which creates stress concentrations. It
follows therefore that a fillet weld will have a lower fatigue strength than say a flush
ground butt. The orientation of the surface discontinuity is also important (as
illustrated in Figure 1501.05.16).
Defects:
Welds often contain surface ripples or crack-like discontinuities which act as fatigue
crack initiators.
Residual stress:
Welded joints contain high levels of tensile residual stress (Figure 1501.05.20),
which act like the superimposed stress shown in Figure 1501.05.17. These are
caused by the thermal shrinkage inherent in the process.
The presence of residual welding stresses and the possibility of stress raisers introduced
to the parent material during its working life by the accumulation of cuts and scratches,
has prompted recent actions to rationalize the application of fatigue data in commercial
structures. This latest thinking is applied to the S/N curves published in The British
Standard for the structural use of aluminium (BS 8118, Part1:1991). These curves
assume that a maximum stress of yield tension is always present in the joint. From a
practical standpoint this therefore assumes that the life of a joint subjected to a stress
fluctuation between -30 MPa and + 40 MPa is not different from that of the same joint
subjected to a stress fluctuating between +30 MPa and +100 MPa. The curves only force
TALAT 1501 56
the designer to assess the stress range and ignore any further influence of mean stress;
this follows the same format as that used in the UK structural steel bridge design code
BS5400. The aluminium values for the S/N curves in BS 8118 are nominally BS5400
steel divided by 3. Other countries are applying the basic fatigue data in different ways
in practice, for instance Canada still uses the concept of applied mean stress. Therefore
the interpretation of theory into practice will continue to be a point of inconsistency for
the foreseeable future.
The high levels of tensile residual stress at the welds can be reduced by hammer or shot
peening which has the effect of inducing beneficial compressive stresses and thereby
improving the fatigue life. The fatigue life of the weld can also be improved by
removing weld surface ripples by grinding or water jet erosion.
HOT COLD
CUT
COLD COLD
- +
RESIDUAL
STRESSES +
- -
-
LONGITUDINAL TRANSVERSE
alu
Residual Stresses Around a Butt Weld 1501.05.20
Training in Aluminium Application Technologies
TALAT 1501 57
1501.06 Literature/References
Aluminium-Taschenbuch
Edited by Aluminium-Zentrale. XXVI/1094 pages, 699 figures, 342 tables,
14.Edition, 1983/1988, ISBN 3-87017-169-3.
Metals Handbook
American Society for Metals, 2nd edition, 1990
TALAT 1501 58
1501.07 List of Figures
TALAT 1501 59
Figure Nr. Figure Title (Overhead)
1501.05.06 Compression, Shear, Bearing Strength and Hardness for Different Aluminium
Alloys
1501.05.07 Erichsen Cupping Test: Effect of Sheet Thickness
1501.05.08 Creep Curves for an Aluminium-Copper Alloy Stressed at 110 MPa
1501.05.09 Tensile Strength of 2014-T6 at Test Temperatures
1501.05.10 Tensile Strength of 2014-T6 Tested at Room Temperature after Exposure at
Elevated Temperature
1501.05.11 Modulus of Elasticity of Aluminium at Various Temperatures
1501.05.12 Tensile Properties of 6061 Alloy Heat Treated, Artificially Aged
1501.05.13 Tear-Test Specimen and Load-Deformation Curves
1501.05.14 Unit Propagation Energies of Aluminium Alloys at Various Temperatures.
1501.05.15 Toughness Properties of Aluminium Alloys at Low Temperatures
1501.05.16 Basic Factors in Fatigue Testing
1501.05.17 The Effect of Mean Stress on Fatigue Life of Welded Aluminium Alloys
1501.05.18 Difference in Fatigue Behaviour between Mild Steel and Aluminium Alloys
1501.05.19 Fatigue, Proof and Ultimate Tensile Strengths of some Wrought Aluminium
Alloys
1501.05.20 Residual Stresses around a Butt Weld
TALAT 1501 60