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Published byRoger Jenkins Modified over 9 years ago
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1 Strength and Ductility
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2 Determining Tensile Strength from the stress-strain curve is easy. Just locate the highest point on the curve. TS = 82 ksi
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3 Yield strength y is defined as the stress needed to permanently stretch a tensile specimen so that the permanent strains is 0.002 (0.2%)
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4 Example: Determine the 0.2% yield strength of this material
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5 Start by drawing a line from.002 parallel to the elastic portion of the stress-strain curve
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6 This gives the yield strength – about 78 ksi in this case
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7 When a part is stressed plastically, part of the strain is elastic and temporary, part is plastic and permanent. Permanent strain is.002 Total strain under load is about.0046
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8 Example: Determine the true stress and strain just before necking occurs Answer: = 82 ksi just before necking occurs At this point = 0.014 T = (1+) = 82ksi (1.014) = 83 ksi T = ln(1+) = ln(1.014) =.0139
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9 An edge dislocation appears as an extra half-plane of atoms inserted into the crystal
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10 Edge dislocations appears as black lines in a high magnification micrograph 51,540X Dislocation
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11 A screw dislocation is like a tear in the material Shear force It is called a screw dislocation because the dislocation causes planes in the lattice to take a helical shape much like the screw thread Maximum strain energy is concentrated along this line
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12 Movement of Dislocations Both edge and screw dislocations can move when a shear stress is applied. The “extra plane” of atoms moves gradually through the crystal, much as a caterpillar moves.
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13 The Burgers vector b is a vector with the length and direction that the dislocation line will move during slip edge dislocation screw dislocation
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14 Slip system Burger’s vector Slip plane Dislocation line The Burger’s vector and the dislocation line together form a slip plane The Burger’s vector defines the slip direction The slip direction and the slip plane together form a slip system
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15 Slip occurs preferentially in close- packed directions on close-packed planes Example: FCC has 4 close packed planes. There are 3 close-packed directions in each plane. 4 planes x 3 directions/plane = 12 possible slip systems in FCC
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16 Slip occurs preferentially in close-packed directions on close-packed planes BCC has 6 “kind of” close packed planes (the {110} family). There are 2 close-packed directions in each plane. 6 planes x 2 directions/plane = 12 possible slip systems in BCC Because the planes are not close-packed, slip is not as easy in BCC as in FCC.
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17 Slip occurs preferentially in close- packed directions on close-packed planes Example: HCP has only 1 set of close-packed planes. There are 3 close-packed directions in this plane. 1 plane x 3 directions/plane = 3 possible slip systems in HCP. Consequently slip is not easy in HCP materials.
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18 Specimens in tension deform most readily when the slip system is at a 45°angle to the direction of pull Example: Hexagonal Close-packed crystals have one close-packed plane (0001 plane)
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19 Grains boundaries are zones of atomic disorder between regions of well-ordered atoms Well-ordered atoms Zone of disorder Grain boundary
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20 Slip lines are oriented differently within each grain of this plastically deformed copper sample Even within crystals, different slip systems can be seen
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21 Plastic deformation alters the grain structure of polycrystalline materials Before deformation After deformation
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22 The term microstructure refers to the shape and size of grains 1.Polish the surface of the metal 2.Attack it with an acid to preferentially remove material between grains 3.Observe under a microscope, and photograph it. Microstructure is best observed using a photomicrograph
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23 Linear Grain Size Determination A B C 90X Each line is 50 mm long in a 90X micrograph 1.Count # of boundaries each line crosses 2.Divide by 50 to get grains/mm in the photo 3.Multiply by 90 to get true # of grains/mm
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24 Area-based Grain Size Determination Grain size 6 N = 2 n-1 Where: N = number of grains per square inch at 100X n = grain size Grain size 5 Grain size 4 Grain size 3 The American Society of Testing and Materials (ASTM) provides a standard set of hexagonal grids to be used with 100X photomicrographs Grains per square inch is given by:
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25 Example: Are the grains in the photo grain size 6? 100X Grain size 6 N = 2 n-1 Where: N = number of grains per square inch at 100X n = grain size Try to match the hexagon size to the grain size in the micrograph
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26 Are the grains in the photo grain size 5? 100X Grain size 5 N = 2 n-1 Where: N = number of grains per square inch at 100X n = grain size
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27 Are the grains in the photo grain size 4? 100X Grain size 4 N = 2 n-1 Where: N = number of grains per square inch at 100X n = grain size
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28 Are the grains in the photo grain size 3? 100X Grain size 3 N = 2 n-1 Where: N = number of grains per square inch at 100X n = grain size
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29 Are the grains in the photo grain size 2? 100X Grain size 2 N = 2 n-1 Where: N = number of grains per square inch at 100X n = grain size
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30 A Frank-Read source can generate dislocations (a) A dislocation is pinned at two ends by lattice defects. (b) As the dislocation continues to move, it bends. (c) Dislocation loops back on itself. (d) A new dislocation is created.
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31 Coldworking increases dislocation density to the point that they start to interfere with each other
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32 Yield Strength, Tensile Strength, and Ductility as Functions of % Cold Work Yield StrengthTensile StrengthDuctility % Cold Work MPa %EL ksi
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33 Recrystallization of cold-worked brass a)33% cold-worked brass before annealing b) 3 s at 580°C – onset of recrystallization c) 4 s at 580°C d) 8 s at 580°C – recrystallization is complete
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34 RecoveryGrain growth Annealing Temperature (deg C) Effect of annealing on a cold-worked brass Recrystallization ductility TS Grain size
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