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Dr. HABEEB HATTAB HABEEB Office: BN-Block, Level-3, Room-088 Email: hbuni61@yahoo

Dr. HABEEB HATTAB HABEEB Office: BN-Block, Level-3, Room-088 Email: hbuni61@yahoo.com Ext. No.: 7292. Manufacturing Processes. University TENAGA National College Of Engineering Mechanical Department Academic Year - 2009. Lecture Note. Nature and Properties of Materials.

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Dr. HABEEB HATTAB HABEEB Office: BN-Block, Level-3, Room-088 Email: hbuni61@yahoo

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  1. Dr. HABEEB HATTAB HABEEB Office: BN-Block, Level-3, Room-088 Email: hbuni61@yahoo.com Ext. No.: 7292 Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  2. Manufacturing Processes University TENAGA NationalCollege Of EngineeringMechanical DepartmentAcademic Year - 2009 Lecture Note Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  3. Nature and Properties of Materials Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  4. Nature and Properties of Materials - Classification of Materials Used in Manufacturing - Engineering Properties of Material - Composites and New Materials Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  5. - CLASSIFICATION OF MATERIALS Materials Metallic Non-Metallic Ferrous Organic Non-Ferrous Inorganic Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  6. MATERIALS METALLIC Ferrous Non-Ferrous Gray Cast Iron Aluminum Malleable Iron Titanium Steel Zinc Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  7. MATERIALS NON-METALLIC Organic Inorganic Leather Glass Wood Ceramic Rubber Fused silica Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  8. MATERIALS Ferrous and Non-Ferrous alloys Non-ferrous materials are very important because they are alloyed with ferrous materials special properties can be obtained.Example:Good cutting properties can be added to tool steel by alloying it with molybdenum or vanadium. Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  9. MATERIALS Non-metallic materials are classified as inorganic if they do not contain organic cells or carbon compounds. See Table 2.1&2.2 (Metals and Non-Metals) All materials have their importance in manufacturing. In automobile industry we can find all types of materials in a car (fig.next slide):- Ferrous →Steel (Body), Non-Ferrous →Aluminum, organic →Rubber, Inorganic→ Glass. Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  10. Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  11. Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  12. MATERIALS Glass Steel Plastic Lead • -Petroleum • Wood • Ceramic • Animal • product • Nickel Aluminum Composite Rubber Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  13. According to service characteristic and cost a designer (Material Engineer or R&D Engineer) can suggest a compromise of choice between metallic and non-metallic, and between organic and inorganic.Example:To reduce weight and improve some specific properties, manufacturers are used to designing ADVANCED COMPOSITESMATERIALS (Fiber Reinforced Plastics) These material are composed at least two material:1. Fiber (fiber class, carbon, Graphite)2. Binder or matrix (Thermoplastic, Polymer) Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  14. - ENGINEERING PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS Engineering properties Tensile strength Ductility Shear Creep Compressive Notch sensitivity Torsion strength Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  15. Engineering properties Tensile strength Strength - The amount of ultimate and yield strength in psi a material can withstand.Strength - The ability of a materials to resist deformation when external forces are applied. Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  16. Engineering properties Specimen Test: A specimen is tested by pulling its two ends. Then the tensile strength is determined by finding:-1. Stress=Force per unit area. = N/m2 (Pa) or lb/in2 (psi) Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  17. Engineering properties 2.Strain = units of in/inStrain(ε) =Change in length over the original length. ε =3. Modulus of Elasticity = Stress / Strain = σ/εA measure of Elasticity Determines the slope of the stress / strain curve where it is a straight line. L1 - L L Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  18. F t A rea, A F t F t s = A o original area before loading Stress,  • Normalize Applied-Force to Supporting Area • TENSILE Stress,  • Engineering Stress Units → N/m2 (Pa) or lb/in2 (psi) Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  19. Tensile specimen Gripping Zone Gripping Zone L - Failure Zone ¾ inch ½ inch 8 ½ inches Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  20. Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  21. Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  22. Point a: -Represents the Elastic Limit. After this point with more force a Permanente deformation takes place. (The curve is no longer straight line) Point b: -At this point the material Yield Strength is determined. Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  23. Point c: -At this point the material Ultimate Strength is determined. Point d: -A fracture will occur after Maximum Deformation. Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  24. Forces and Responses • Tensile – applied loads “pull” the sample Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  25. F F A = cross sectional o Area (when unloaded) M F s A o A c M 2R Common States Of Stress • Simple tension: cable • Simpleshear: drive shaft Ski lift Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  26. A o Bridge Common States Of Stress Cont.. • Simple COMPRESSION: Balanced Rock Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  27. Shear strength -There is no universal standard used for evaluating shear or torsion characteristic -Shear can be determined from hand- books. - Usually Shear Strength=50% of tensile strength Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  28. Shear strength - Torsional Strength=75% of tensile strength - ShearStress G୪ ୪ – Displacement angle (Shear angle or shear strain) Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  29. Shear strength G – Shear modules or the modulus of rigidity. G = (3 / 8) E or G=E / 2 (1 + ୪ ) Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  30. Page-23 Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  31. Compressive Strength It is easily determined for brittle materials (Cast iron) that will fractures when a sufficient load is applied.Compressive strength for cast iron= (3 to 4) tensile strength. Because of this properties of some ,material which fracture easily we should use a factor of safety FS, Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  32. Compressive Strength FS = σactual /σallowable Recommended values of FS = 1 to 3 High values ofFS are used for unreliable material or when severe load is applied Low values ofFS are used for reliable materials (steel). Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  33. Ductility This property enable the material to be bent, drawn, stretched, formed or permanently distorted without rupture (aluminum, structural steel). Ductility for cast iron is minimum (a brittle material) Tensile test is used to evaluate ductility: Percentage of elongation= [(Lf-L)/L]x100 Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  34. Ductility L- Original length , Lf- New length after fracture Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  35. Ductility ductility:Ability of a material to deform under tension without rupture. Two ductility parameters may be obtain from the tensile test: 1- Relative elongation -ratio between the increase of the specimen length before its rupture and its original length: Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  36. Ductility ε= (Lm– L0) / L0 Where Lm– maximum specimen length. 2-Relative reduction of area –ratio between the decrease of the specimen cross-section area before its rupture and its original cross-section area: ψ= (S0– Smin) / S0 Where Smin– minimum specimen cross-section area. Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  37. Creep And Notch sensitivity Creep:Is a permanent deformation resulting from the loading of members over a long period of time. HighTemperature creep lead to: Failure of loaded units such as (High-pressure steam piping) Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  38. Creep And Notch sensitivity Elongating caused by creep will occure below the yeild strength of the material. Heat treatment, grain size, and chemical composition appreciably affect Creep strength Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  39. Creep And Notch sensitivity Notch sensitivity On the other hand is a measure of the ease with which a crack progresses through a material from an existing notch, crack, or sharp corner. Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  40. Next Lecture:Foundry Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

  41. THANK YOU Lecturer: Dr. HABEEB ALANI

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