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SECOND EDITION
'A'
AN INTRODUCTION
TO
THEIF;
PROPERTIES
&
APPLICATIONS
Michael
F
Ashby. David
R
H
Jones
Engineering Materials
1
An lntroduction
to
their Properties
and
Applications
Other titles
of
interest
Ashby
Ashby and Jones
Brydson
Charles and Crane
Crawford
Hull and Bacon
Jones
Neale
Shreir et al.
Smallman and
Bishop
Smith
Materials Selection in Mechanical Design
Engineering Materials 2
Plastics Materials, 6th Edition
Selection and Use
of
Engineering Materials, 2nd Edition
Plastics Engineering, 2nd Edition
Introduction to Dislocations, 3rd Edition
Engineering Materials
3
Tribology Handbook, 2nd Edition
Corrosion, 3rd Edition
Metals and Materials
The Language
of
Rubber
Engineering
Materials
1
An
Introduction to their Properties
and
Applications
Second Edition
by
Michael
F.
Ashby
and
David
R.
H.
Jones
Department
of
Engineering, University
of
Cambridge,
UK
UTTERWORTH
EINEMANN
OXFORD AMSTERDAM BOSTON LONDON NEW YORK
PARIS
SAN DIEGO SAN FRANCISCO SINGAPORE SYDNEY TOKYO
Butterworth-Heinemann
An imprint of Elsevier Science
Linacre House, Jordan Hill, Oxford OX2 8DP
225 Wildwood Avenue, Wobum, MA 01801-2041
First published 1980
Second edition 1996
Reprinted 1997, 1998 (twice), 2000,2001,2002
0
1980, 1996, Michael
F.
Ashby and David R.
H.
Jones. All rights reserved.
The right
of
Author name to
be
identified as the author of this work has
been
asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988
No
part
of
this publication may
be
reproduced in any material form (including
photocopying or storing in any medium by electronic means and whether or
not transiently or incidentall to some other use of this publication) without the
written permission of the copyright holder except in accordance with the
provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988
or
under the terms
of a licence issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency Ltd,
90
Tottenham
Court Road, London, England WIT 4LP. Applications for the copyright
holder’s written permission to reproduce any
part
of
this publication should
be addressed to the publishers
British Library Cataloguing
in
Publication Data
Ashby, Michael
E
Engineering materials.
1.
an introduction to their
properties and applications.
-
2nd. ed.
1. Materials
2.
Mechanics
I.
Title
11.
Jones, David R. H. (David Rayner Hunkin),
1945-620.1’1
ISBN
0
7506 3081 7
Library
of
Congress Cataloguing in Publication Data
Ashby, Michael
E
Engineering materials. 1. an introduction to their properties and
applicationsby Michael
F.
Ashby and David R. H. Jones
-
2nd. ed.
p. cm.
Rev.ed
of
Engineering materials. 1980.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
0
7506 3081 7
1.
Materials.
I.
Jones, David R.
H.
(David Rayner Hunkin),
1945
11. Ashby, M.F. Engineering materials
III.
Title
TA403.A69 96-1677
620.1’1-dc20 CIP
For
information on all Butterworth-Heinemann publications
visit our website at www.bh.com
Typeset by Genesis Typesetting, Rochester, Kent
Printed and bound in Great Britain by
MFG
Books Ltd, Bodmin, Comwall
General introduction
1.
Engineering Materials and their Properties
examples of structures and devices showing how we select the right
material for the
job
3
A.
Price and availability
2.
The Price and Availability
of
Materials
15
what governs the prices of engineering materials, how long will supplies
last, and how can we make the most of the resources that we have?
B.
The elastic moduli
3.
The
Elastic Moduli
27
stress and strain; Hooke’s Law; measuring Young’s modulus; data for
design
4. Bonding Between Atoms
36
the
types
of bonds that hold materials together; why some bonds are
stiff and others floppy
5.
Packing
of
Atoms
in
Solids
45
how atoms are packed in crystals
-
crystal structures, plane (Miller)
indices, direction indices; how atoms are packed in polymers, ceramics
and glasses
6.
The Physical Basis
of
Young’s
Modulus
58
how the modulus is governed by bond stiffness and atomic packing; the
glass transition temperature in rubbers; designing stiff materials
-
man-made composites
7.
Case Studies
of
Modulus-limited Design
66
the mirror for a big telescope; a stiff beam
of
minimum weight;
a
stiff
beam of minimum cost
vi
Contents
C.
Yield strength, tensile strength, hardness and
ductility
8.
The Yield Strength, Tensile Strength, Hardness and Ductility
definitions, stress-strain curves (true and nominal), testing methods,
data
9.
Dislocations and Yielding in Crystals
the ideal strength; dislocations (screw and edge) and how they move to
give plastic flow
10.
Strengthening Methods and Plasticity
of
Polycrystals
solid solution hardening; precipitate and dispersion strengthening;
work-hardening; yield in polycrystals
11.
Continuum Aspects
of
Plastic Flow
the shear yield strength; plastic instability; the formability of metals and
polymers
12.
Case Studies in Yield-limited Design
materials for springs; a pressure vessel of minimum weight; a pressure
vessel of minimum cost; how metals are rolled into sheet
D.
Fast fracture, toughness and fatigue
where the energy comes from for catastrophic crack growth; the
condition for fast fracture; data for toughness and fracture toughness
13.
Fast Fracture and Toughness
14.
Micromechanisms
of
Fast Fracture
ductile tearing, cleavage; composites, alloys
-
and why structures are
more likely to fail in the winter
15.
Fatigue Failure
fatigue testing, Basquin’s Law, Coffin-Manson Law; crack growth rates
for pre-cracked materials; mechanisms
of
fatigue
16.
Case Studies in Fast Fracture and Fatigue Failure
fast fracture of an ammonia tank; how to stop a pressure vessel blowing
up; is cracked cast iron safe?
E.
Creep deformation and fracture
high-temperature behaviour of materials; creep testing and creep curves;
consequences of creep; creep damage and creep fracture
17.
Creep and Creep Fracture
77
93
104
111
119
131
140
146
155
169
Contents
vii
18. Kinetic Theory
of
Diffusion
1
79
Arrhenius's Law; Fick's first law derived from statistical mechanics of
thermally activated atoms; how diffusion takes place in solids
19. Mechanisms
of
Creep, and Creep-resistant Materials 187
metals and ceramics
-
dislocation creep, diffusion creep; creep in
polymers; designing creep-resistant materials
20. The Turbine Blade
-
A Case
Study
in Creep-limited Design
197
requirements of a turbine-blade material; nickel-based super-alloys,
blade cooling; a new generation of materials?
-
metal-matrix composites,
ceramics, cost effectiveness
F.
Oxidation and corrosion
21. Oxidation
of
Materials
the driving force for oxidation; rates of oxidation, mechanisms of
oxidation; data
22. Case Studies in Dry Oxidation
making stainless alloys; protecting turbine blades
23. Wet Corrosion
of
Materials
voltages as driving forces; rates of corrosion; why selective attack is
especially dangerous
24. Case Studies in Wet Corrosion
how to protect an underground pipeline; materials for a light-weight
factory roof; how to make motor-car exhausts last longer
G.
Friction, abrasion and wear
25. Friction and Wear
surfaces in contact; how the laws
of
friction are explained
by
the
asperity-contact model; coefficients of friction; lubrication; the adhesive
and abrasive wear of materials
26. Case Studies in Friction and Wear
the design
of
a
journal bearing; materials for
skis
and sledge runners;
'non-skid' tyres
211
219
225
232
241
250
viii
Contents
Final
case
study
27.
Materials and Energy in Car Design
the selection and economics
of
materials
for
automobiles
Appendix
1
Examples
Appendix
2
Aids and Demonstrations
Appendix
3
Symbols and Formulae
261
273
290
297
Index
303
General introduction
To
the student
Innovation in engineering often means the clever use of a new material
-
new to a
particular application, but not necessarily (although sometimes) new in the sense of
‘recently developed’. Plastic paper clips and ceramic turbine-blades both represent
attempts to do better with polymers and ceramics what had previously been done well
with metals. And engineering disasters are frequently caused by the misuse of
materials. When the plastic tea-spoon buckles as you stir your tea, and when a fleet
of
aircraft is grounded because cracks have appeared in the tailplane, it is because the
engineer who designed them used the wrong materials or did not understand the
properties of those used.
So
it is vital that the professional engineer should know how
to select materials which best fit the demands of the design
-
economic and aesthetic
demands, as well as demands of strength and durability. The designer must
understand the properties of materials, and their limitations.
This book gives a broad introduction to these properties and limitations. It cannot
make you
a
materials expert, but it can teach you how to make a sensible choice of
material, how to avoid the mistakes that have led to embarrassment or tragedy in the
past, and where to turn for further, more detailed, help.
You will notice from the Contents list that the chapters are arranged in
groups,
each
group describing a particular class of properties: the elastic modulus; the fracture
toughness; resistance to corrosion; and
so
forth. Each such group
of
chapters starts by
defining the property,
describing how it is
measured,
and giving a table of
data
that we use
to solve problems involving the selection and use of materials. We then move on to the
basic science
that underlies each property, and show how we can use this fundamental
knowledge to design materials with better properties. Each group ends with a chapter
of
case studies
in which the basic understanding and the data for each property are
applied to practical engineering problems involving materials. Each chapter has
a
list
of
books for
further reuding,
ranked
so
that the more elementary come first.
At the end of the book you will find sets of examples; each example is meant to
consolidate or develop a particular point covered in the text. Try to do the examples
that derive from a particular chapter whilesthis is still fresh in your mind. In this way
you will gain confidence that you are on top of the subject.
No
engineer attempts to learn or remember tables or lists
of
data for material
properties. But you
should
try to remember the broad orders-of-magnitude of these
quantities. All grocers know that ’a kg of apples is about
10
apples’
-
they still weigh
them, but their knowledge prevents them making silly mistakes which might cost them
money. In the same way, an engineer should know that ’most elastic moduli lie between
1
and
lo3
GN
m-2;
and are around
102GN
mW2 for metals’
-
in any real design
you
need
an accurate value, which you can get from suppliers’ specifications; but an order-of-
[...]... next chapter we consider the economic aspects of this choice, returning in later chapters to a discussion of the other properties Further reading J E Gordon, The New Science of Strong Materials, or Why You Don t Fall Through the Floor, Penguin Books, London, 1976, (an excellent general introduction to materials) K E Easterling, Tomorrow’s Materials, Institute of Materials, London, 1987, (an entertaining... geophysical data and economic projections are poor, their evaluation is subject to vast uncertainty Although the resource base is uncertain, it obviously is important to have some estimate of how long it can last Rough estimates do exist for the size of the resource base, and, using these, our exponential formula gives an estimate of how long it would take us to use up half of the resources The haif-life... Electrical and Magnetic Resistivity Dielectric constant Magnetic permeability Environmental Interaction Oxidation Corrosion Wear Production Ease of manufacture Joining Finishing Aesthetic Colour Texture Feel the selection of a material for this application But it is not the only one The shaft must have a high yield strength If it does not, it will bend or twist if you turn it hard (bad screwdrivers do)... is caused by a force pulling at right angles to the face; we call it the tensile stress Suppose now that the force acted not normal to the face but at an angle to it, as shown in Fig 3.l(b) We can resolve the force into two components, one, F,, normal to the face and the other, F,, parallel to it The normal component creates a tensile stress in the block Its magnitude, as before, is F t / A ... involves considerable outlay (new processing methods, new joining methods, etc.) Examples of substitution are the replacement of stone and wood by steel and concrete in construction; the replacement of copper by polyethylene in plumbing; the change from wood and metals to polymers in household goods; and from copper to aluminium in electrical wiring There are, however, technical limitations to substitution... assumes control of its own resources, mean that the relative costs of materials will change in the next 20 years, and a good designer must be aware of these changes, and continually on the look out for opportunities to substitute one material for another Further reading P E Chapman and E Roberts, Metal Resources and Energy, Butterworths, London, 1983 A H Cottrell, Environmental Economics, Edward Arnold,... energy) of extracting and transporting the ore or feedstock and processing it to give the engineering material Inflation and increased energy costs obviously drive the price up; so, too, does the necessity to extract materials, like copper, from increasingly lean ores; the leaner the ore, the more machinery and energy are required to crush the rock containing it, and to concentrate it to the level that the... content) can, within limits, be studied and their influence anticipated The calculation of resource life involves the important distinction between reserves and resources The current reserve is the known deposits which can be extracted profitably at today’s price using today’s technology; it bears little relationship to the true magnitude of the resource base; in fact, the two are not even roughly proportional... Engineering Materials 1 magnitude knowledge prevents you getting the units wrong, or making other silly, and possibly expensive, mistakes To help you in this, we have added at the end of the book a list of the important definitions and formulae that you should know, or should be able to derive, and a summary of the orders-of-magnitude of materials properties To the lecturer This book is a course in Engineering... engineering; copper in electrical conductors; polymers in appliances, and so forth; and roughly in the same proportions Among metals, steel is used in the greatest quantities by far: 90% of all the metal produced in the world is steel But the non-metals wood and concrete beat steel - they are used in even greater volume About 20% of the total import bill of a country like Britain is spent on engineering materials . and their limitations.
This book gives a broad introduction to these properties and limitations. It cannot
make you
a
materials expert, but it can teach. greater proportion of the cost of the structure is that associated with
labour or with production and fabrication. Stainless steels, most aluminium alloys