Metals and Alloys Flashcards

1
Q

Types of metal cubic structures

A

Cubic - corners have atoms

Face centred cubic - corners and faces have atoms

Body centred cubic- corners have atoms and connected one atom in the centre of the cube

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2
Q

Definition of a Metal

A

an aggregate of atoms in a crystalline structure

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3
Q

Definition of an alloy

A

combination of metal atoms in a crystalline structure (metals are the building blocks of these)

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4
Q

Describe the parts of the cooling curve

A

upper descending curve- molten metal
Flat line - liquid > solid
Lower descending curve - Cooling

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5
Q

What are metal nuclei

A

aggregates of metal atoms in little spheres that form during cooling

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6
Q

What do nuclei turn into and then what do they turn into after that

A

Dendrites

Grains

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7
Q

What is the area where grains touch called

A

Grain boundary

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8
Q

Name the three types of grains and what defines them

A

Equi-axed grains- grains of equal size (gradual cooling)

Radial grains- formed from rapid cooling (quenching)

Fibrous- formed when grains undergo cold working

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9
Q

How to alter grains

A

Quenching (rapid cooling)
Slow cooling (large nuclei, coarse grains)
Nucleating agents - act as a foci for crystal growth

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10
Q

What are the pros and cons of small grains

A

pros - high elastic limit, increased ultimate tensile strength and hardness

cons- decreased ductility

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11
Q

What is slip (clue dislocation of columns)

A
  • defect in metal grain
  • force applied
  • defect moves along an axis parallel to that force
  • reaches grain boundary
  • crystal structure changes with no defect
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12
Q

Describe Cold working

A
  • done at temperatures below recrystallisation (altering existing grains)
  • causes slip
  • Increases = elastic limit, UTS and hardness
  • Decreases = ductility, corrosion resistance, impact resistance
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13
Q

Residual stress (as a result of cold working)

A
  • Cold working helps some properties but results in imperfection in the lattice
  • results in undesirable distortion
  • relieved by annealing
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14
Q

What terms are used to describe the metallic components of alloy grains

A

Phase- physically distinct homogenous structure
- One phase = grains of metal A only
- Two phase = Individual grains of A + B in lattice network
Solution- homogenous mixture at atomic level
- Solid solution = One phase but Metal A + B in homogenous mixture

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15
Q

What is Liquidus

A

temperature the alloy begins to crystallise at

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16
Q

What is solidus

A

temperature where it solidifies (completely crystallised)

17
Q

What is the difference between metals and alloys in terms of crystallisation

A

metals crystallise at one temperature

alloys crystallise over a temperature range

18
Q

What is Coring and how is it rectified

A
  • It happens when an alloy is cooled rapidly
  • results in a concentration being formed from the centre of an alloy to the periphery
  • rectified by using a homogenising anneal
19
Q

Why is slip more difficult in alloys than metals

A
  • because the metal atoms have to climb over and through atoms of different sizes instead of ones the same size as it
  • the slip plane in alloys is much less easier to roll over than in metals
20
Q

What is a Eutectic Alloy and what makes it unusual

A

An alloy that melts at a temperature higher than that of its individual metals

i.e together stronger

Therefore it breaks the rule of alloys having a temperature melting range, it instead has one melting temperature