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IT 111 MANUFACTURING MATERIALS

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Title: IT 111 MANUFACTURING MATERIALS


1
IT 111 MANUFACTURING MATERIALS
  • Lecture 3
  • Thomas E. Scott

2
Standards Organizations
  • American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM)
  • American Iron and Steel Institute (AISI)
  • Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE)
  • American Institute of Astronautics and
    Aeronautics (AIAA)
  • NASA
  • Department of Defense (DOD)

3
ASTM Standards provide Letter designation for
standards that include specifications, test
methods, definitions, classification, suggested
practices
  • F. Specific applications of materials
  • G. Corrosion, deterioration
  • H. Emergency Standards
  • A. Ferrous Metals
  • B. Nonferrous Metals
  • C. Cement, ceramics
  • D. Miscellaneous materials
  • E. Miscellaneous Subjects

4
Ferrous Metals (Iron)
  • In industry, iron is mainly used in the form of
    steel
  • Steel an iron carbon alloy with less than 2
    carbon
  • Cast Iron more that 2 but less than 4 carbon

5
Production of Iron
  • Very little pure iron produced
  • Usually ingot or iron powders
  • Mostly steels with alloys carbon, silicon,
    nickel, chromium, manganese
  • Plain carbon steel less that 1 alloying
    element of carbon, silicon, and/or manganese
  • Low-alloy steel have small quantities of the
    above plus nickel, chromium, molydenum or others
    that alter the properties of steel
  • High-alloy steel have more than 5 of alloying
    elements

6
Source of Iron (Fe)
  • Ores of iron
  • Magnetite contains 65 iron
  • Ferric oxide (Fe2O3) and Ferrous oxide (FeO)
  • Highly magnetic (Lodestone)
  • Hermatite contains 50 iron
  • Ferric oxide (Fe2O3)
  • Commonly know as rust
  • Blood red
  • Taconite contains 30 iron
  • Green colored
  • Contains a lot of silica

7
Refining Iron Ore
  • Heat ore in a furnace where air (oxygen) has been
    removed
  • Produces coke
  • Blast furnace force air at 1100 F to permit
    carbon oxygen combustion
  • Iron melts
  • Slag provides a protective barrier for purified
    iron
  • Pure iron captured as ingots (Pigs)
  • Contains roughly 4 carbon (cast iron)
  • Yield is about 50 - 6000 tons of ore to produce
    3000 tons of pig iron

8
Production of Steel (Conversion)
  • Burn off carbon
  • Blow hot air across the pigs and scrap iron
  • Let the carbon burn
  • Add exact amounts of carbon and alloys
  • Draw off liquid into ingots
  • Open Hearth 200 tons in 12 hours
  • Bessemer 25 tons in 15 minutes
  • Electric arc Expensive because of energy used
    (for finishing)

9
Commercial Shapes of Steel Ingots
  • Blooms
  • Beams
  • Channels
  • Tubes
  • Billets
  • Bars
  • Rods
  • Wire
  • Slabs
  • Plates
  • Pipe
  • Sheets
  • Coils

10
Commercial Shapes of Steel
11
Carbon in Steel
12
Effect of carbon addition(Small increase
approx 0.1)
  • More expensive
  • Less ductile more brittle
  • Harder
  • Loses machinability
  • Higher tensile strength
  • Lower melting point
  • Easier to harden
  • Harder to weld

13
Characteristics of Carbon Steels
  • Cold working
  • Plastic deformation at room temp
  • Decrease thickness 4
  • Increase tensile strength 50
  • Work hardening results
  • May require heat treating
  • Examples
  • Cold rolled steel
  • Cold drawn tubing

14
Other elements in steel
  • Aluminum
  • Oxygen remains in steel undesirable
  • Adding aluminum (killed steel) causes oxygen to
    react with aluminum and negates rust formation
    (good for forging and piercing)
  • Aluminum also promotes small grain size and
    therefore, toughness

15
Other elements in steel
  • Manganese
  • Sulfur accumulates at grain boundaries
    undesirable
  • Causes the steel to lose strength at high temp
  • Manganese ties up the sulfur
  • Increases strength, hardenability, and hardness

16
Other elements in steel
  • Boron increases hardenability
  • Copper increases corrosion resistance
  • Chromium corrosion resistance and hardenability
  • Niobium increases strength
  • Titanium high strength at high temp
  • Tungsten carbide high hardness
  • Vanadium toughness and impact resistance

17
Steel
  • Free Cutting (High sulfur)
  • e.g., AISI 1111 up to 1151
  • Easy machining
  • Higher carbon XX44 for example, greater hardness
    and flame case hardening

18
Nomenclature for steels Steel AISI and
SAEFour digit designator describes alloy content
19
Nomenclature for steels
  • Examples
  • 1010 Plain carbon (C 0.1)
  • 4030 Steel with 0.30 Molybdenum
  • Standards table required to determine actual
    content, suggested use and properties
  • Web access to clarify material properties
  • - Often have to pay for it

20
Nomenclature for steels
  • Table 3-B of Kazanas
  • Table 3-C of Kazanas
  • Table 3-D of Kazanas
  • Table 3-E of Kazanas
  • Table 3-F of Kazanas
  • Table 3-G of Kazanas
  • Table 3-H of Kazanas

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Tool Steels
  • High carbon high alloy
  • High wear and heat resistance
  • High strength hard
  • Letter classification

30
Tool Steels
  • Examples
  • W-1 Water hardening 1 carbon used for cold
    working of metals
  • D3 High chromium with 2.25 carbon for cold
    working applications
  • S2 Shock resistant hammer or chisel steel

31
Tool Steels
  • Table 3-I of Kazanas
  • Table 3-J of Kazanas
  • Table 3-K of Kazanas

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Tool Steels
  • Must sustain high loads
  • Often loads concentrated on surface
  • May have elevated temperatures
  • Often substantial shock loading
  • Must be immune to cracking
  • Often particular steel alloy types
  • Seven basic types of tool steel

35
Tool Steels
  • Properties for tool steels
  • Wear resistance
  • Impact resistance
  • High temperature capability
  • Toughness

36
Alloys in tool steels
  • Carbon hardenability (gt0.6)
  • Manganese reduce brittleness (lt0.6)
  • Silicon for hot forming, strength and toughness
    (lt2)
  • Tungsten hot hardness
  • Vanadium hardness and wear resistance
  • Molybdenum deep hardening, toughness
  • Cobalt hot hardness
  • Chromium hardenability (up to 12)
  • Nickel toughness and wear resistance

37
Cast Iron
  • More than 2 carbon
  • Lower strength since carbon flakes produce minute
    cracks
  • Very susceptible to breaking (brittle)
  • Grey cast iron almost no ductility
  • White cast iron 1 silicon making it hard

38
Nodular Cast Iron
  • Nodular cast iron small amounts of calcium,
    cerium, lithium, magnesium, sodium
  • Slow cooling produces spheres instead of plates
  • Improves ductility 604020
  • Tensile 60K, Yield 40K, 20 elongation
  • Engine blocks, pistons, crankshafts

39
Stainless Steel
  • Normal Steels corrode rapidly if left uncoated
  • Higher temperature, more rapid corrosion
  • Chromium and nickel slow corrosion
  • Stainless steels have Cr gt 12

40
Stainless Steel
  • Ferritic can be strengthened by work hardening
  • Jewelry, utensils, automotive trim
  • Austenitic non-magnetic
  • 18/8 18 Cr, 8 Ni
  • Low carbon low strength
  • Food utensils
  • Martensitic High strength
  • Knives,
  • Maraging superalloys, contain Moly and Titan

41
Stainless Steel
  • Numbering system
  • 200s and 300s Austenitic
  • 400s Ferritic and Martensitic

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Corrosion (Rust)
  • Galvanic corrosion (electrolytic process)
  • Corrosion sped up by
  • Temperature
  • Metal fatigue
  • Cold working
  • Retarded by
  • Alloys
  • Coatings
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