Course syllabus
Metals Engineering IMS120/Module B Materials Engineering - fall 2023
Overall Objective
This course comprises both the module B named Metalllic Materials of 5 credit units within the course master programme course Materials Engineering as well as the self-standing course Metallic Materials of 7.5 credit units. The theory and contents is the same, but the latter includes extended project assignment of 2.5 credit units.
The aim is to make sure that the participants have acquired relevant in-depth knowledge regardingengineering metals for advanced reasoning about and assessment of the most common alloys used in society.
The focus is placed on the correlation between microstructure, processing/manufacture and the resulting properties of engineering metals when used in different automotive and mechanical engineering applications. Issues covered are microstructure control and strengthening of metals (ferrous and non-ferrous) including basics behind strengthening of metals and strengthening mechanisms; processing and heat treatment including use of phase diagrams and TTT/CCT diagrams, etc.; hardening, residual stresses, etc.; certain fundamentals of brittleness, toughness and ductility; deformation behaviour; certain fundamentals of environmental impact on materials with respect to oxidation/corrosion. Materials covered are low-alloy and high strength steel, tool steel, stainless steel, superalloys, titanium alloys, cast iron, copper alloys, aluminium alloys and magnesium alloys.
Learning Goals
After completing this module or course, you should be able to:
- Describe and understand the basic principles for microstructure design of engineering metals on advanced level
- Apply this knowledge in various situations of potential importance in practical engineering
- Apply principles for different processes in order to create specific microstructure and properties
- Apply basic corrosion and oxidation mechanisms for assessing the behaviour of engineering metals in various applications
- Describe typical properties for different classes of engineering metals with particular emphasis on role of microstructure and how this can be achieved
Important Issues
An important part in the course is to acquire understanding how material properties are affected by differentmanufacturing process, heat treatment protocols and conditions for use in applications. This includes, forexample, the impact of high and low temperatures, stress levels and strain rates. The course connects in particular to subject areas adjacent to materials technology such as solid mechanics, machine design and manufacturing technology.
In the course we also cover application of optical microscopy and introduction to materials and processmodelling including software tools for thermodynamic and kinetics based tools as Thermo-Calc and JMatPro as well as FE-based tools as Deform 2D/3D. With JMatPro, for example, advanced prediction and modelling of phase constitution and properties of steel, cast iron, aluminium alloys and nickel-base alloys can be done.
Note that the labs are NOT designed to give you training in the laboratory. They should be viewed more as means of introducing specific tools of importance in modern materials technology work. This is why we have selected i) a specific lab on optical microscopy to show how assessment involving image processingmay work out, ii) to have a tutored class on heat treatment of steel to develop your skills in assessing microstructure-property- processing relationships from micrographs and facts, iii) a specific demonstration on prediction of properties and phases of materials using the software tools as JMatPro and Thermo- Calcand finally iv) an event intended to show how FE-modelling is a real tool used in process modelling, here applied on heat treatment.
Changes compared to last year:
Course packs covering all parts are further updated and the e-literature and a reference text book aresources for further reading. For master students following the compulsory materials engineering course of 15 credit units, this metallic materials module of 5 credit units includes no project assignment. For students following the self-standing course of 7.5 credits units, there extended practical in the form of project assignment. The project assignment is compulsory with final oral group presentation and hand in of power point presentation according to instructions announced during the course.
Organisation
The module or course includes a lecture series (see below) and two compulsory practicals an for participants following the elective self-standing course a project assignment. The tutors involved iare as follows.
Examiner: Prof. Lars Nyborg, phone 7721257, e-mail: lars.nyborg@chalmers.se
Course leader: Prof. Emmy Cao, phone: 7721252, e-mail: yu.cao@chalmers.se
Others involved:
Xiaolong Li e-mail: xiaolongl@chalmers.se
Fardan Jabir Hussain e-mail: fardan@chalmers.se
The lecture schedule may be changed. Changes will then normally be announced latest the week before.
Student administration
For questions regarding reporting of results for the course , etc, please contact: Hanije Safakar, hanije@chalmers.se.
Student representatives
To be announced
The practical classes
The practical classes are compulsory and they will include:
- Phase constitution/simulation, heat treatment and properties of alloys for engineering applications:Small group (max 5 participants) tutored practical class where a number of specific problems areaddressed by using the software JMatPro and Thermo-Calc (3 hours per group). There can be maximum 5 students per group. This event is booked by each group by contacting Fardan Jabir Hussain via e-mail: fardan@chalmers.se. The event is organised on Campus. Schedule announced after course start.
- Optical microscopy of cast Al-alloy - the aim of the lab is to demonstrate how modern analytical optical microscopy can be applied to study and assess the microstructure of a metallic material with relevance to industrial application. Small group of (max 5 participants) will be tutored. The lab is run by each group Xiaolong Li via e-mail: xiaolongl@chalmers.se. The event is organised on Campus. Schedule announced after course start.
Group assignment
Participating in group assignment is compulsory only for students following the self-standing course of 7.5 credit units. You will form a group of maximum 5 participants. Each group will have its own scientific/technical topic related to the contents of the course. The topic will be among some pre-defined topics of industrial/technical relevance (separate list). The result of the group assignment should be communicated by oral presentation and power point presentation. There will be no grading, only pass/fail, but follow-up/feedback for each group.
Examination
For Module B Metallic Materials:
Final written exam on 25 Oct. at 8.30. No aids allowed, only approved calculator.
For the self-standing course Metallic Materials:
Final written on 26 Oct at 14.00. No aids allowed, only approved calculator.
Course literature
The lecture hand-outs (pdf-format) will be provided only for course participants.
Via Canvas you will find downloadable documents for the practical classes mentioned and different sets of problems for the problem-solving events as well as other text documents (old exams, course summarynotes, etc.). Only students being registered for the course will have access to these documents.
The e-sources behind the course are:
MAIN SOURCE
- Handbook of Mechanical Alloy Design, M. Totten, L. Xie, K. Funatani, CRC Press (Print ISBN: 978-0-8247-4308-6), source: CRC Press
OTHER SOURCES
- Handbook of Metallurgical Process Design, Xie, K. Funatani, G.E. Totten (Print ISBN: 978-0-8247-4106-8), Source: CRC Press.
- Steel Heat Treatment – Metallurgy and Technologies, E. Totten (Print ISBN: 978- 0-8493-8455-4), Source: CRC Press.
- Mechanical Properties of Engineering Materials, Soboyejo, (Print ISBN: 978- 8247-8900-8), Source: CRC Press.
- Physical Metallurgy and Advanced Materials, E. Smallman, A.H.W. Ngan, Elsevier Ltd. (Print ISBN: 978-0-7506-6906-1), source: Science Direct
- Engineering Materials Science, Ohring, Elsevier Ltd (Print ISBN:978-0-12-524995-9), source: Science Direct
Schedule
The enclosed schedule is preliminary and may be revised pending on circumstances. Updated information will be communicated via Canvas.
Acronyms: L = Lecture, E = Problem Solving. For lecture rooms, see Time Edit, IMS120.
Introduction Basics of metallic materials (BSc level repetition) |
L |
2023-09-05 13.15-17:00 |
Emmy Cao |
PPT: crack course on metallic materials |
Basics of heat treatment |
L |
20023-09-09 13:15-17:00 |
Emmy Cao |
Microstructural control and development (course pack) |
Basics of heat treatment |
L |
20023-09-12 08:00-09:45 |
Emmy Cao |
Microstructural control and development (course pack) |
Basics of corrosion and oxidation |
L |
2023-09-12 10:00-11:45 |
Emmy Cao |
Corrosion/oxidation (course pack) |
Basics of strengthening |
L |
2023-09-13 15:15-17 |
Lars Nyborg |
Strength of metals (course pack) |
Basics of strengthening |
L |
2023-09-16 13:15-17:00 |
Lars Nyborg |
Strength of metals (course pack) |
Basics of corrosion and oxidation |
L |
2023-09-19 8:00-09:45 |
Emmy Cao |
Corrosion/oxidation (course pack) |
Designing with Aluminum alloys |
L |
2023-09-19 10:00-11:45 |
Emmy Cao |
Designing with Aluminum alloys (course pack) |
Heat treatment of hypereutectoid steel |
E |
2023-09-20 15:15-17:00 |
Emmy Cao |
Practical class: Heat treatment of hypereutectoid steel |
Designing with copper alloys |
L |
2023-09-23 13:15-15:00 |
Emmy Cao |
Designing with Copper alloys (course pack) |
Heat treatment of hypereutectoid steel |
E |
2023-09-23 15:15-17:00 |
Emmy Cao |
Practical class: Heat treatment of hypereutectoid steel |
Designing with tool steel |
L |
2023-09-26 8:00-9:45 |
Emmy Cao |
Designing with tool steel (course pack) |
Problem solving |
E |
2023-09-26 10:00-11:45 |
Emmy Cao |
Problems pack (course pack) |
Designing with tool steel |
L |
2023-09-27 15:15-17:00 |
Lars Nyborg |
Designing with stainless steel (course pack) |
Designing with titanium alloys |
L |
2023-09-30 13:15-15:00 |
Emmy Cao |
Designing with titanium alloys (course pack) |
Problem solving |
E |
2023-09-30 15:15-17:00 |
Emmy Cao |
Problems pack (course pack) |
Problem solving |
E |
2023-10-01 13:15-17:00 |
Emmy Cao |
Problems pack (course pack) (spare) |
Designing with nickel-base alloy |
L |
2023-10-03 8:00-9:45 |
Lars Nyborg |
Handbook of mechanical alloy design, G.M. Totten et al. (e-literature on Chalmers library) |
Designing with cast iron |
L |
2023-10-03 10:0-11:45 |
Lars Nyborg |
Handbook of mechanical alloy design, G.M. Totten et al. (e-literature on Chalmers library) |
Problem solving |
E |
2023-10-04 15:00-17:00 |
Lars Nyborg |
Problems pack (course pack) |
Project assignment presentations |
|
2023-10-07 13:15-17:00 |
Presentation by students following free standing course |
Group presentations (not applicable to IMS115 participants) |
Problem solving |
E |
2023-10-10 8:00-11:45 |
Lars Nyborg/Emmy Cao |
Typical prior exam questions |
Laborations
The time and place for the two laborations will be announced at course start and these events will be run using options according to Time Edit for IMS120.