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Conventional Engineering Materials

There are more than 50,000 materials available to engineers for the design and manufacturing of products for various applications. These materials range from ordinary materials (e.g., copper, cast iron, brass), which have been available for several hundred years, to the more recently developed, advanced materials (e.g., composites, ceramics, and high-performance steels). Due to the wide choice of materials, today’s engineers are posed with a big challenge for the right selection of a material and the right selection of a manufacturing process for an application. It is difficult to study all of these materials individually; therefore, a broad classification is necessary for simplification and characterization.

These materials, depending on their major characteristics (e.g., stiffness, strength, density, and melting temperature), can be broadly divided into four main categories: (1) metals, (2) plastics, (3) ceramics, and (4) composites.

Each class contains large number of materials with a range of properties which to some extent results in an overlap of properties with other classes. For example, most common ceramic materials such as silicon carbide (SiC) and alumina (Al2O3) have densities in the range 3.2 to 3.5 g/cc and overlap with the densities of common metals such as iron (7.8 g/cc), copper (6.8 g/cc), and aluminum (2.7 g/cc). Table depicts the properties of some selected materials in each class in terms of density (specific weight), stiffness, strength, and maximum continuous use temperature. The maximum oper-rating temperature in metals does not degrade the material the way it degrades the plastics and composites. Metals generally tend to temper and age at high temperatures, thus altering the microstructure of the metals. Due to such microstructural changes, modulus and strength values generally drop. The maximum temperature cited in Table is the temperature at which the material retains its strength and stiffness values to at least 90% of the original values shown in the table.


Metals

Metals have been the dominating materials in the past for structural applications. They provide the largest design and processing history to the engineers. The common metals are iron, aluminum, copper, magnesium, zinc, lead, nickel, and titanium. In structural applications, alloys are more frequently used than pure metals. Alloys are formed by mixing different materials, sometimes including nonmetallic elements. Alloys offer better properties than pure metals. For example, cast iron is brittle and easy to corrode, but the addition of less than 1% carbon in iron makes it tougher, and the addition of chromium makes it corrosion-resistant. Through the principle of alloying, thousands of new metals are created.

Metals are, in general, heavy as compared to plastics and composites. Only aluminum, magnesium, and beryllium provide densities close to plastics. Steel is 4 to 7 times heavier than plastic materials; aluminum is 1.2 to 2 times heavier than plastics. Metals generally require several machining operations to obtain the final product.

Metals have high stiffness, strength, thermal stability, and thermal and electrical conductivity. Due to their higher temperature resistance than plastics, they can be used for applications with higher service temperature requirements.

Plastics

Plastics have become the most common engineering materials over the past decade. In the past 5 years, the production of plastics on a volume basis has exceeded steel production. Due to their light weight, easy processability, and corrosion resistance, plastics are widely used for automobile parts, aerospace components, and consumer goods. Plastics can be purchased in the form of sheets, rods, bars, powders, pellets, and granules. With the help of a manu-facturing process, plastics can be formed into near-net-shape or net-shape parts. They can provide high surface finish and therefore eliminate several machining operations. This feature provides the production of low-cost parts. Plastics are not used for high-temperature applications because of their poor thermal stability. In general, the operating temperature for plastics is less than 100°C. Some plastics can take service temperature in the range of 100 to 200°C without a significant decrease in the performance. Plastics have lower melting temperatures than metals and therefore they are easy to process.

Ceramics

Ceramics have strong covalent bonds and therefore provide great thermal stability and high hardness. They are the most rigid of all materials. The major distinguishing characteristic of ceramics as compared to metals is that they possess almost no ductility. They fail in brittle fashion. Ceramics have the highest melting points of engineering materials. They are generally used for high-temperature and high-wear applications and are resistant to most forms of chemical attack. Ceramics cannot be processed by common metallurgical techniques and require high-temperature equipment for fabrication. Due to their high hardness, ceramics are difficult to machine and therefore require net-shape forming to final shape. Ceramics require expensive cutting tools, such as carbide and diamond tools.


Composites

Composite materials have been utilized to solve technological problems for a long time but only in the 1960s did these materials start capturing the attention of industries with the introduction of polymeric-based composites. Since then, composite materials have become common engineering materials and are designed and manufactured for various applications including automotive components, sporting goods, aerospace parts, consumer goods, and in the marine and oil industries. The growth in composite usage also came about because of increased awareness regarding product performance and increased competition in the global market for lightweight components. Among all materials, composite materials have the potential to replace
widely used steel and aluminum, and many times with better performance. Replacing steel components with composite components can save 60 to 80% in component weight, and 20 to 50% weight by replacing aluminum parts. Today, it appears that composites are the materials of choice for many engi-neering applications.

2 comments:

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Madhavachar Rangnekadr said...

Waooow!! Nice blog, this will be greatly helpful.

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