Introduction to
Materials Science and Engineering
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
• Materials Science – Investigating relationships that
exist between the structure and properties of materials
• Materials Engineering – Is, on the basis of these
structure-property correlations, designing or engineering
the structure of a material to produce a pre-determined
set of properties
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Structure
• Sub atomic – electrons and nuclei (protons and neutrons)
• Atomic – organization of atoms or molecules
• Microscopic – groups of atoms that are normally
agglomerated together
• Macroscopic – viewable with the un-aided eye
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Units of Length
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
The Scale of Things
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Structure, Processing, & Properties
• Properties depend on structure
ex: hardness vs structure of steel
• Processing can change structure
ex: structure vs cooling rate of steel
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
The Materials Selection Process
• Application Determine required Properties
Properties: mechanical, electrical, thermal,
magnetic, optical, deteriorative.
• Properties Identify candidate Material(s)
Material: structure, composition
• Material Identify required Processing
Processing: changes structure and overall shape
ex: casting, sintering, vapor deposition, doping,
forming, joining, annealing.
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Composition, Bonding, Crystal Structure and
Microstructure DEFINE Materials Properties
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Properties of Materials
Electrical properties Optical properties
A. Electrical conductivity,resistivity A. Refractive index
B. Absorption, reflection, and
Dielectric properties transmission
A. Polarizability C. Birefringence (double
B. Capacitance refraction)
C. Ferroelectric properties
D. Piezoelectric properties Corrosion properties
E. Pyroelectric properties
Deteriorative properties
Magnetic properties
A. Paramagnetic properties Biological properties
B. Diamagnetic properties A. Toxicity
C. Ferromagnetic properties B. bio-compatibility
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
ELECTRICAL
• Electrical Resistivity of Copper:
• Adding “impurity” atoms to Cu increases resistivity.
• Deforming Cu increases resistivity.
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
MAGNETIC
• Magnetic Storage:
Recording medium is magnetized by recording head.
• Magnetic Permeability vs. Composition:
Adding 3 atomic % Si makes Fe a better recording medium!
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
OPTICAL
• Transmittance:
Aluminum oxide may be transparent, translucent, or
opaque depending on the material structure.
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
DETERIORATIVE
Stress & Saltwater...
--causes cracks!
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Types of Materials
• Metals: strong, ductile, tough, high density, conductors.
• Ceramics: strong, brittle, low density, insulators.
• Polymers: weak, ductile, low density, insulators.
• Semiconductors: weak, brittle, low density, semi-conductors.
• Composites: strong, ductile, low density, conductors, insulators.
• Crystals: atoms have long range periodic order (a).
• Glasses: atoms have short range order only (b).
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Six Major Classes of Materials
• Some of these have descriptive subclasses.
• Classes have overlap, so some materials fit into more than one class.
• Metals
Iron and Steel
Alloys and Superalloys (e.g. aerospace applications)
Intermetallic Compounds (high-T structural materials)
• Ceramics
Structural Ceramics (high-temperature load bearing)
Refractories (corrosion-resistant, insulating)
Whitewares (e.g. porcelains)
Glass
Electrical Ceramics (capacitors, insulators, transducers, etc.)
Chemically Bonded Ceramics (e.g. cement and concrete)
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Six Major Classes of Materials
• Polymers
Plastics
Liquid crystals
Adhesives
• Electronic Materials
Silicon and Germanium
III-V Compounds (e.g. GaAs)
Photonic materials (solid-state lasers, LEDs)
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Six Major Classes of Materials
• Composites
Particulate composites (small particles embedded in a different
material)
Laminate composites (golf club shafts, tennis rackets,
Damaskus swords)
Fiber reinforced composites (e.g. fiberglass)
• Biomaterials
Man-made proteins (cytoskeletal protein rods or “artificial
bacterium”)
Biosensors (Au-nanoparticles stabilized by encoded DNA for
anthrax detection)
Drug-delivery colloids (polymer based)
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Types of Materials
Let us classify materials according to the way the atoms
are bound together (Chapter 2).
• Metals: valence electrons are detached from atoms, and
spread in an 'electron sea' that "glues" the ions together.
Strong, ductile, conduct electricity and heat well, are
shiny if polished.
• Semiconductors: the bonding is covalent (electrons are
shared between atoms). Their electrical properties
depend strongly on minute proportions of contaminants.
Examples: Si, Ge, GaAs.
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Types of Materials
• Ceramics: atoms behave like either positive or negative
ions, and are bound by Coulomb forces. They are usually
combinations of metals or semiconductors with oxygen,
nitrogen or carbon (oxides, nitrides, and carbides). Hard,
brittle, insulators. Examples: glass, porcelain.
• Polymers: are bound by covalent forces and also by weak
van der Waals forces, and usually based on C and H. They
decompose at moderate temperatures (100 – 400 C), and
are lightweight. Examples: plastics rubber.
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
METALS
• Distinguishing features
Atoms arranged in a regular repeating structure
Relatively good strength
Dense
Malleable or ductile: high plasticity
Resistant to fracture: tough
Excellent conductors of electricity and heat
Opaque to visible light
Shiny appearance
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
METALS
• Thus, metals can be formed and machined easily, and are usually
long-lasting materials.
• They do not react easily with other elements, however, metals such
as Fe and Al do form ompounds readily (such as ores) so they must be
processed to extract base metals.
• One of the main drawbacks is that metals do react with chemicals in
the environment, such as iron-oxide (rust).
• Many metals do not have high melting points, making them useless
for many applications.
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
METALS
• Elemental metals are in yellow
• We need to recall and use knowledge from the periodic table
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
METALS
• Applications
Electrical wiring
Structures: buildings, bridges, etc.
Automobiles: body, chassis, springs, engine block, etc.
Airplanes: engine components, fuselage, landing gear assembly…
Trains: rails, engine components, body, wheels
Machine tools: drill bits, hammers, screwdrivers, saw blades…
Shape memory materials: eye glasses
Magnets
Catalysts
Examples
• Pure metal elements (Cu, Fe, Zn, Ag, etc.)
• Alloys (Cu-Sn=bronze, Cu-Zn=brass, Fe-C=steel, Pb-Sn=solder, NiTinol)
• Intermetallic compounds (e.g. Ni3Al)
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
METALS
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Ceramics
• Distinguishing features
Except for glasses, atoms are regularly arranged
Composed of a mixture of metal and nonmetal atoms
Lower density than most metals
Stronger than metals
Low resistance to fracture: low toughness or brittle
Low ductility or malleability: low plasticity
High melting point
Poor conductors of electricity and heat
Single crystals are transparent
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Ceramics
• Where metals react readily with chemicals in the environment and
have low application temperatures in many cases, ceramics do not
suffer from these drawbacks.
• Ceramics have high-resistance to environment as they are
essentially metals that have already reacted with the environment,
e.g. Alumina (Al2O3) and Silica (SiO2, Quartz).
• Ceramics are heat resistant. Ceramics form both in crystalline and
non-crystalline phases because they can be cooled rapildy from the
molten state to form glassy materials.
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Ceramics
• Elemental occurring in ceramics are in blue
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Ceramics
• Applications
Electrical insulators
Abrasives
Thermal insulation and coatings
Windows, television screens, optical fibers (glass)
Corrosion resistant applications
Electrical devices: capacitors, varistors, transducers, etc.
Highways and roads (concrete)
Biocompatible coatings (fusion to bone)
Self-lubricating bearings
Magnetic materials (audio/video tapes, hard disks, etc.)
Optical wave guides
Night-vision
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Ceramics
• Examples
Simple oxides (SiO2, Al2O3, Fe2O3, MgO)
Mixed-metal oxides (SrTiO3, MgAl2O, YBa2Cu3O7-x, having
vacancy defects.)
Nitrides (Si3N4, AlN, GaN, BN, and TiN, which are used for hard
coatings.)
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Ceramics
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Ceramics
Crystalline ceramics (a) and non-crystalline glasses (b) yield inherently
different properties for applications. Open circles represent nonmetallic
atoms, solids represent metal atoms.
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Polymers
• Distinguishing features
Composed primarily of C and H (hydrocarbons)
Low melting temperature.
Some are crystals, many are not.
Most are poor conductors of electricity and heat.
Many have high plasticity.
A few have good elasticity.
Some are transparent, some are opaque
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Polymers
• Polymers are attractive because they are usually lightweight and
inexpensive to make, and usually very easy to process, either in molds,
as sheets, or as coatings.
• Most are very resistant to the environment.
• They are poor conductors of heat and electricity, and tend to be
easy to bend, which makes them very useful as insulation for
electrical wires.
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Polymers
• Two main types of polymers are thermosets and thermoplastics.
Thermosets are cross-linked polymers that form 3-D networks,
hence are strong and rigid.
Thermoplastics are long-chain polymers that slide easily past
one another when heated, hence, they tend to be easy to form,
bend, and break.
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Polymers
• Elements that compose polymers: limited
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Polymers
• Applications and Examples
Adhesives and glues
Containers
Moldable products (computer casings, telephone handsets,
disposable razors)
Clothing and upholstery material (vinyls, polyesters, nylon)
Water-resistant coatings (latex)
Biodegradable products (corn-starch packing “peanuts”)
Biomaterials (organic/inorganic intefaces)
Liquid crystals
Low-friction materials (teflon)
Synthetic oils and greases
Gaskets and O-rings (rubber)
Soaps and surfactants
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Polymers
Polymer composite materials, reinforcing glass fibers in a polymer matrix.
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Semiconductors
• Distinguishing features
Made primarily from metalloids
Regular arrangement of atoms (crystals, but not, e.g., solar cell
amorphous Si)
Extremely controlled chemical purity
Adjustable conductivity of electricity
Opaque to visible light
Shiny appearance
Some have good plasticity, but others are fairly brittle
Some have an electrical response to light
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Semiconductors
• Semiconductors define the Digitial Revolution and Information Age.
• Starting with extremely pure crystalline form, their electrical
conductions can be controlled by impurity doping (and defect).
• The result is a tiny electrical switching called a "transistor".
Transistors (at present) can be packed to about 1 billion in the size of
a Lincoln Penny.
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Semiconductors
• Elements occurring in semiconductors
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Semiconductors
• Applications and Examples
Computer CPUs
Electrical components (transistors, diodes, etc.)
Solid-state lasers
Light-emitting diodes (LEDs)
Flat panel displays
Solar cells
Radiation detectors
Microelectromechanical devices (MEMS)
Examples: Si, Ge, GaAs, and InSb
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Semiconductors
(a) Micro-Electrical-Mechanical Systems (MEMS), (b) Si wafer for
computer chip devices.
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Composites
• Distinguishing features
Composed of two or more different materials (e.g., metal/ceramic,
polymer/polymer, etc.)
Properties depend on amount and distribution of each type of material.
Collective properties more desirable than possible with any individual
material.
• Applications and Examples
Sports equipment (golf club shafts, tennis rackets, bicycle frames)
Aerospace materials
Thermal insulation
Concrete
"Smart" materials (sensing and responding)
Brake materials
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Composites
• Examples
Fiberglass (glass fibers in a polymer)
Space shuttle heat shields (interwoven ceramic fibers)
Paints (ceramic particles in latex)
Tank armor (ceramic particles in metal)
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Chapter 1: General Introduction
Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering
Summary
• Use the right material for the job.
• Understand the relation between properties, structure,
and processing.
• Recognize new design opportunities offered by
materials selection
Chapter 1: General Introduction