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IE 251 Manufacturing materials

IE 251 Manufacturing materials. Instructor: Dr. Mohamed Ali Eissa Saleh Room: ………….... 2A 128/1 Phone: …………... 467-3703 Grading Midterm #1: ………. .……….....…… 15% Midterm #2: ………. ……………….. 15% Lecture assignments ……………… 10 Lab #3: ………. ………………….……20 %

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IE 251 Manufacturing materials

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  1. IE 251 Manufacturing materials • Instructor: Dr. Mohamed Ali EissaSaleh • Room: ………….... 2A 128/1 • Phone: …………... 467-3703 • Grading • Midterm #1: ………. .……….....…… 15% • Midterm #2: ………. ……………….. 15% • Lecture assignments ……………… 10 • Lab #3: ………. ………………….……20% • Final Exam: . ……...………………… 40%

  2. Visual Materials... • Texts • ● Fundamentals of Materials Science and Engineering, by William D. Callister, Jr.; John Wiley & Sons, Inc. • References • Engineering Materials 1: An introduction to their properties and applications - M. Ashby & D.Jones • Engineering Materials 2: An introduction to microstructures, processing & design - M. R. Ashby & D. R. H. Jones

  3. IE 251 Manufacturing Materials • Introduction to the structure, processing, properties and performance of Manufacturing materials • metals, polymers, glasses, ceramics and composites • Case studies covering... • selection of materials • component design • analysis of component failures

  4. The course objectives for the student • To develop an understanding of the impact of modern materials on the performance of products that are encountered daily, such as bicycles, beverage containers, and sports equipment. • To develop an understanding of the classes of engineering materials (metal alloys, polymers, ceramics and composites), with an emphasis on their properties and their uses. • To understand how the materials selection process fits into the product design, development and manufacturing process used by industry today. To come to appreciate that product cost and quality play a key role in the materials selection process. • To recognize that environmental regulations (emissions), and societal pressures (energy, safety) can strongly influence the adoption of new technologies and alternate materials. • To discuss the competition of alternate materials for the same application

  5. syllabus • *Chapter 1. Introduction* • *Chapter 2. Atomic Structure and Bonding* • *Chapter 3. The Structure of Crystalline Solids* • *Chapter 4. Imperfections in Solids* • *Chapter 5. Diffusion* • *Chapter 6. Mechanical Properties of Metals* • *Chapter 7. Dislocations and Strengthening Mechanisms* • *Chapter 8. Failure** • Chapter 9. Phase Diagrams* • *Chapter 10. Phase Transformations in Metals* • *Chapter 11. Thermal Processing of Metal Alloys* • *Chapter 13. Structure and Properties of Ceramics* • *Chapter 14. Applications and Processing of Ceramics* • *Chapter 15. Polymer Structures* • *Chapter 16. Characteristics, Applications, and Processing of Polymers* • *Chapter 19. Electrical Properties*

  6. 1. Engineering materials and their propertiesKey points • Enormous range of engineering materials • Types of material properties • Range of properties within and among materials classes • Development of new materials and their impact on design • Failure to select suitable materials can lead to failure of engineering structures and systems • Some failures can be quite spectacular • Liberty ships • Comet (1st commercial jetliner) • Space Shuttle Challenger

  7. There are more than 50,000 commercially available materials with which an engineer may choose to design Table 1.2 • Metals and alloys • Steel, aluminum, etc. • Polymers • Polyethylene, polystyrene, nylon, epoxies, etc. • Ceramics and glasses • Alumina, silica, silicon carbide, etc. • Composite materials • Fiberglass, carbon fiber reinforced polymers, etc. • Natural materials • Wood, leather, silk, bone How to Choose?

  8. The Possible Combinations of Composite Materials are Virtually Unlimited(Fig. 1.1) Metals, Alloys cermets Steel cord tires Composites Ceramics, Glasses Polymers Filled polymers

  9. The Three P’s Price Successful Commercial Products Performance Producibility

  10. Economic Mechanical Physical and Chemical Electrical, magnetic, optical Manufacturing Aesthetics Price, availablity, recyclability, etc. Modulus, yield strength, tensile strength, etc. Density, reactivity (oxidation & corrosion), thermal expansion, melting temp., etc. Resistivity, dielectric constant, optical absorption, etc. Forming, joining, finishing, etc. Color, touch, texture, etc. We Make Decisions Regarding Material Selection Based on Material Properties

  11. Screwdriver Mechanical Economic Physical and Chemical Electrical Magnetic optical Manufacturing Aesthetics

  12. Jet Engine Fan Blades(complex Ni base alloys) Directionally Cast Single Crystal Conventional High Temperature Strength (creep) Oxidation Resistance

  13. Microelectronic Devices are Complex Composite Structures

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