Module 1 Introduction
Module 1 Introduction
(3-0-0-6)
Course Contents
Module
1 Introduction to manufacturing processes
1
Texts and References
Texts:
[1] A. Ghosh and A. K. Mallik, Manufacturing Science, Wiley Eastern, 2010
[2] P. N. Rao, Manufacturing Technology: Foundry, Forming And Welding, Tata
McGraw Hill, 2017.
[3] M. P. Groover, Introduction to Manufacturing Processes, Wiley, 2011
References:
[1] J. S. Campbell, Principles of Manufacturing Materials and Processes, Tata
McGraw Hill, 1995.
[2] M. C. Flemings, Solidification Processing, Tata McGraw Hill, 1982.
[3] P. C. Pandey and C. K. Singh, Production Engineering Sciences, Standard
Publishers Ltd., 2013.
[4] S. Kalpakjian and S. R. Schmid, Manufacturing Processes for Engineering
Materials, Pearson education, 6th edition, 2016.
3
Grading system
Assignment/Tutorial: Optional
Quiz: 20%
Mid-semester: 30%
End-semester: 50%
2
Module 1
Manufacturing processes
Materials processing technologies
Types and properties of engineered materials
Evaluation of properties of manufactured products
Manufacturing processes
Joining
Machining
Casting Finishing
Forming
Assembly
Design – Most economic manner
Understanding of Production – Selection of important process
Manufacturing process parameters
Development of new techniques and
modification of existing technologies
3
Manufacturing processes
www.montanstahl.com
Hot rolling
www.lsengineering.co.uk
Sheet metal forming 8
4
Different manufacturing processes
www.makeagif.com
Additive manufacturing
9
Additive manufacturing www.theadditivemanufacturing.com
Classification
of
Manufacturing
Processes
Courtesy:
Principles of Modern Manufacturing,
M. P. Groover 10
5
Selection of Manufacturing Processes
Single manufacturing process
Fabrication
of products
Multiple manufacturing processes in sequence
Shape of the
part/product
Production rate
11
Production cost
Courtesy:
Manufacturing Processes
for Engineering
12 Materials,
Kalpakjian and Schmid
6
Selection of Manufacturing Processes
casting powder
metallurgy
crankshaft
Frying pan
casting
sheet metal
forging www.desertcart.in forming
14
7
History of Materials and Manufacturing Processes
Courtesy:
Manufacturing Processes
for Engineering
15 Materials,
Kalpakjian and Schmid
Courtesy:
Manufacturing Processes
for Engineering
16 Materials,
Kalpakjian and Schmid
8
History of Materials and Manufacturing Processes
Courtesy:
Manufacturing Processes
for Engineering
17 Materials,
Kalpakjian and Schmid
Different
casting
processes
Courtesy:
Manufacturing Engineering and18Technology,
Kalpakjian and Schmid
9
Different
bulk-deformation
processes
Courtesy:
Manufacturing Engineering
and Technology,
Kalpakjian and19Schmid
Different
Sheet-metal
forming
processes
Courtesy:
Manufacturing Engineering and20Technology,
Kalpakjian and Schmid
10
Different
joining
processes
Courtesy:
Manufacturing Engineering and21Technology,
Kalpakjian and Schmid
Different
Polymer-
processing
processes
Courtesy:
Manufacturing Engineering and
Technology, 22
Kalpakjian and Schmid
11
Different
machining
and
finishing
processes
Courtesy:
Manufacturing Engineering and23Technology,
Kalpakjian and Schmid
Length-scale of
manufacturing
processes
Macromanufacturing
Micromanufacturing
Nanomanufacturing
Courtesy:
Manufacturing Processes
for Engineering Materials,
24
Kalpakjian and Schmid
12
Materials processing technologies
Raw materials - either extracted from minerals or produced from basic chemicals or
natural substances.
Metallic raw materials - crude ore is processed to increase the concentration of the
desired metal
It involves crushing, roasting, magnetic separation, flotation, and leaching.
Additional processes - smelting and alloying are used to produce the metal that is to
be fabricated into parts that are eventually assembled into a product
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Oxides are reduced, but other elements are mixed with iron such as
Carbon – 3 – 4.5%
Manganese – 0.15 – 2.5%
Phosphorus – 0.1 – 2.5 Pig iron
Silicon – 1 – 3 %
Sulfur – 0.05 – 0.1 %
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13
Materials processing technologies
27
Composites Polymers
• consist of more than one material type • very large molecules
• designed to display a combination of • low density, low weight
properties of each component • maybe extremely flexible
Ceramics: Al2O3, SiC, SiO2 (oxides, nitrides and carbides) - bricks, refractories
Polymer: Plastic and rubber materials, organic – C, H2, other non metallic materials
Composites: Concrete, plywood, fiberglass
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14
Metals and alloys
29
15
Metals and alloys
Alloy steel: Alloying elements are added to steels in small quantity (usually less than 5%)
to improve strength or hardenability
- Alloying elements is added to much quantity (upto 20%) to produce special
properties (such as corrosion resistance)
31
Gray cast iron – low ductility, excellent compressive strength, machinability, wear
resistance, sound and damping characteristics
- carbon in the form of graphite flakes
White cast iron – carbon in the form of carbide
- very hard and brittle
- applied where abrasion resistance is required
Malleable cast iron – controlled heat treatment of white cast iron
- Cementite dissociates and forms regular graphite spheroids
- greater ductility than gray cast iron
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Metals and alloys - Summary
• Ferrous: iron as main constitute
• Non ferrous: other than iron as main constitute
• Steel: carbon less than 2 %
• Cast iron: carbon more than 2%
• Cu alloy: Pure Cu – electrical industry
• Al alloy: Automotive frame
• Ni alloy: Outstanding strength and corrosion resistance
• Ti alloy: High temperature engineering material
• Superalloys: High strength, creep resistance, oxidation and corrosion resistance, fatigue
resistance even at high temperature
- Jet engine, rocket and nuclear application
- Ni based – Inconel, Hastelloy
- Iron-based
- Cobalt- based 33
Polymer
Thermosetting: at elevated temperature it is soften with increasing temperature.
When it cooled, becomes harder and stronger. No chemical change is involved.
Thermosetting polymer is significantly stronger and more rigid than thermoplastic
Thermoplastic: Soften over a range of temperature. It is formed by injection molding.
Large amount of permanent deformation is available. Having useful strength.
Thermoplastics have low melting points and low tensile strength. Thermosetting plastics
have high melting points and tensile strength.
Thermoplastics can melt under heat after curing while thermoset plastics retain their form
and stay solid under heat once cured
17
Elastomers
Elastomer: Elastic polymer, special class of linear polymer that display large
amount of elastic deformation
Acquire crosslinked structure
35
Composites
Comprised of two or more physically distinct materials with at least one material providing
reinforcing properties
Composites
Laminar
Particle Reinforced
Fibre Reinforced
36
18
Ceramics and Glasses
Complex compounds and solutions that contain both metallic and
nonmetallic elements (C, N, O, P, or S)
typically hard and brittle
exhibit high strength and high melting points
exhibit low thermal and electrical conductivity
Good chemical and thermal stability, good creep resistance
Can be made amorphous structure with a random pattern, like glass
(silicates)
37
Semiconductors
19
Physical properties
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Mechanical properties
Strain 𝜺 : Change in dimension per unit original dimension
Stress 𝝈 𝒐𝒓 𝝉 : Applied force per unit area
Normal Stress and Shear stress
Strength: Ability of a material to resist the applied force without breaking or
yielding.
Stiffness: Ability of material to resist deformation under stress
Elasticity: Property of material to regain its original shape after deformation
when the external force are removed
Plasticity: Property of a material which retains permanent deformation with
the applied load
40
20
Mechanical properties
Ductility: Ability of a material enabling it to be drawn in to wire with the
application of a tensile force
Brittleness: It is property of a material opposite to ductility.
Cast iron is a brittle material
Malleability: Special case of ductility which permits materials to be rolled or
hammered in to thin sheets.
Ex. aluminum
Toughness: Property of material to resist fracture due to high impact load
Measurement - Energy absorbed before fracture
Resilience: Amount of energy when deformed elastically and release upon
unloading
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Mechanical properties
Creep: Material is subjected to a constant stress at elevated temperature for
long period of time - it creates slow and permanent deformation
Fatigue: When a material is subjected to cyclic stresses, it fails below yield point
stress
Hardness: Resistance to wear or scratching
Damping capacity – Loading and unloading path are different
Gray cast iron – high damping capacity
Steel – transmits sound and vibration
42
21
Other properties of materials
43
Properties evaluation
44
22
Mechanical Properties
Characteristic information from stress-strain curve
Proportional limit, Young’s modulus, Resilience or Modulus of Resilience,
Yield strength, Offset yield point (0.2% strain), Ultimate tensile strength,
Fracture strength, toughness, damping capacity
45
Dynamic Properties
Loading condition in engineering components
Impact load or rapidly change in magnitude
Repeated cycle of loading and unloading
Frequent change in mode of loading
23
Creep Properties
47
Thank you
for your kind attention
End of Module 1
Introduction to Manufacturing Processes
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