This self-contained course presents a sampling of the fields of Materials Engineering and Materials Science. This course is intended primarily for engineering students who are not planning to major in either Materials Engineering or Materials Science. We will focus primarily on the concerns of the materials engineer -the person interested in choosing materials to make a finished product. This selection is determined by compromises among material properties, ease of fabrication, and cost. In contrast, the materials scientist is concerned with understanding the relationships between material properties and the internal structure of a material-that is, atomic bonding, arrangements of atoms, grain structure, and other microscopically observable features. We leave most of these associations to advanced courses, which will use more chemistry and physics than needed for this course. The course is divided into four units: Unit 1: Ways That Materials Can Fail - What Can Go Wrong? Unit 2: Classes of Engineering Materials - What Do We Have? Unit 3: Comparison of Engineering Materials - - Which Is Best? Unit 4: Processing of Materials - How Can We Shape It? In Unit 1, we will look at available handbook properties and laboratory test results that characterize a materials strength or weakness to failure. We will concentrate on mechanical property failures, leaving electrical and other types of breakdown to other courses. Our concerns will be: Static, steady-state applied forces (Elastic Deformation) Ductile materials (Plastic Deformation) Brittle materials (Fast Fracture) Cyclic, vibration forces (Fatigue Failure) High temperature environments (Creep Deformation) Corrosive environments (Oxidation and Wet Corrosion) In Unit 2, we will identify four major classes of the tens of thousands of available materials: metals , polymers , ceramics , and composite materials . We will examine specific examples from each category. Unit 3 is a synthesis of the first two units. We will see the consequences of the numerical handbook values defined in Unit 1 in evaluating the materials in Unit 2. In Unit 4, we will look at how we process our materials to obtain the desired configurations for our products. Your study will include a look at casting , mechanical forming , sintering , and joining . Not all materials can be processed with all procedures.
Discover the remarkable journey of Lurnable student Advaith Chakravarthy Shankarkumar, a passionate agricultural sciences graduate who ventured from I
Australia announces a cap of 270000 on foreign student intake for 2025 to manage migration and housing pressures. Learn about the implications and fut
Explore the transformative trends shaping India's education landscape by 2025, including digital learning, the National Education Policy 2020, and th
Biology students have a broad range of career options even if they miss out on admission to a medical college. Know more.
Report Spam
Question: Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit. Est iure, rerum ad porro debitis odio sequi aliquam. Quis officia nobis accusamus, ut ipsum, inventore autem repudiandae voluptates cupiditate iure aliquid?
9 Answers
155
Register now to access exclusive content & personalised recommendations.
Don't miss out.
Sign up today!
Register now to access exclusive content & personalised recommendations.
Don't miss out.
Sign up today!
Register now to access exclusive content & personalised recommendations.
Don't miss out.
Sign up today!