06 - Uet FM Lec
06 - Uet FM Lec
UET Taxila
Lecture 6
Structure-Sensitive Properties
and
structure-insensitive properties
Structure-Sensitive Properties
Dependency
Structure-Sensitive Properties
depend critically on things like:
1- The composition of the metal
2- Whether it has been heated,
quenched or cold formed.
3- Alloying or heat treating
These factors controlling the
structure of the metal.
List different structure-sensitive properties.
Answer:
Structure-sensitive properties are:
yield strength, hardness, tensile
strength, ductility, fracture
toughness, fatigue strength,
creep strength, corrosion
resistance, wear resistance,
thermal conductivity, electrical
conductivity.
List different structure-insensitive
properties
Lattice Points in
Simple Cubic (SC)
Body Centered Cubic (BCC)
BCC
It appears at
W, Mo and -Fe.
Face Centered Cubic
(FCC)
There are:
3 different cubic planes,
6 dodecahedra planes and
4 octahedral planes.
The planes are denoted with
Miller indices.
Phases
Phase Definition
A phase is a region of
material that has
uniform physical and
chemical properties.
Examples of Phases
Water is a phase – any one
drop of water is the same
as the next.
Ice is another phase – one
splinter of ice is the same
as any other.
But the mixture of ice and
water in your glass at
dinner is not a single
phase
because its properties vary
as you move from water
to ice.
Ice + water is a two-phase
mixture
Grain and phase boundaries
A pure metal, or a solid solution, is
single phase.
It is certainly possible to make
single crystals of metals or alloys
(but it is difficult and the expense
is only worth it for high technology
applications such as single-crystal
turbine blades or single-crystal
silicon for microchips.)
Normally, any single-phase
metal is polycrystalline –
Vacancies
Interstitials
Dislocations
1- Vacancies
Vacancy crystal defect.
The lattice vacancies are a
stable feature of metals at all
temperatures above absolute
zero.
By successive jumps of atoms, it
is possible for a vacancy to
move in the lattice structure and
therefore play an important part
in diffusion of atoms through the
lattice.
Vacancies are not only
present as a result of
solidification but can be
produced by raising the
temperature or by
irradiation with fast
moving nuclear particles.
2- Interstitials: