When molten metals cool, their particles reform into a crystal lattice structure, there are three types:
Close Packaged Hexagonal - weak, poor strength to weight ratio
Body-Centered Cubic - ductile, good electrical conductor
Face-Centered Cubic - hard and tough
Crystals grow into dendrites (think neurons) and form a skeletal structure
Grains - dendritic structures, meet at surfaces called the grain boundary
Grain size and shape can be controlled by the rate of cooling of a metal
Grain size can also be controlled via hardening, tempering, normalizing, and annealing
Not that annealing and normalizing are extremely similar processes but annealing involves a non-ferrous metal and normalizing involves a ferrous metal
Reheating allows grains to diffuse and structures to change
Slower cooling grows larger grains as they have more time to grow, vice versa
Alloys - A mixture of a metal and another metal or a metal and a non-metal
Alloys can harden a metal by disrupting its structure with differently sized atoms and not allowing grains to slide past each other as easily
Alloying usually increases tensile and compressive strength but reduces ductility and malleability
Pure iron is too soft and ductile but many alloys can be made with it
Work Hardening - Causes permanent distortion in metal while working it cold
Usually performed by striking metal flatter with a hammer
The striking flattens grains and makes them harder
Can cause internal stresses and compromise internal stability
Heating - Reverses internal stresses from work hardening by heating a metal to its crystal growth temperature, which would allow the grains to relax
Tempering - Hardens metal by heating it and quenching it in a pool of water or oil
Superalloy - Extremely durable alloy used at high temperatures, usually at or above 75% of its melting point
Creep and oxidation resistance are important criteria for superalloys
Creep - Gradual extension of a material under constant force, creep accelerates at higher temperatures
Oxidation - Occurs when oxygen gas is present or when exposed to an extremely high/low pH level
Recovery - The collection of used metal for reuse
Metals are infinitely recyclable and recycling them reduces the energy required to make new products
Glass
Glass is made of melted silica (sand) + an alkali that lowers the melting point
Characteristics - Hard, brittle, transparent, high compressive strength, high tensile strength, thermal insulator
Metal oxides are often added to glass to add color
GLASS IS AMORPHOUS - Has no definite structure
Laminated Glass - Layers of glass with a layer of thin plastic sandwiched between layers of glass. The plastic layers can absorb more energy because they are flexible, so the glass is stronger
Tempered Glass - A process that heats the glass and cools the outside faster than the inside, which causes internal stresses within the glass that place the inside under compression and the outside under tension.
Soda Glass - Poor glass in general, poor resistance to thermal shock
Pyrex - Borosilicate glass, less susceptible to thermal shock, used for cooking
Pharmaceutical - Glass’s non-porous nature makes it easy to clean and more chemically resistant
Recycling - Glass is infinitely recyclable
The process starts with crushing glass to a very fine powder called cullet
Reusing cullet in glass manufacturing reduces the energy cost and raw material usage
Note the difference between something green and biodegradable
Green - Simply helpful for the environment
Biodegradeable - Breaks down easily and is not harmful to the environment
Glass is green in that its use and reuse helps the environment by using less raw materials
Glass is not biodegradable as it takes a very long time (predicted to be >1,000,000 years) to break down, not easy
IB Design Technology - Topic 4: Metals and Glass
IB Design Technology - Topic 4: Metals and Glass
IB Design technology - Topic 4: Metals and Glass
Metals
When molten metals cool, their particles reform into a crystal lattice structure, there are three types:
Close Packaged Hexagonal - weak, poor strength to weight ratio
Body-Centered Cubic - ductile, good electrical conductor
Face-Centered Cubic - hard and tough
Crystals grow into dendrites (think neurons) and form a skeletal structure
Grains - dendritic structures, meet at surfaces called the grain boundary
Grain size and shape can be controlled by the rate of cooling of a metal
Grain size can also be controlled via hardening, tempering, normalizing, and annealing
Not that annealing and normalizing are extremely similar processes but annealing involves a non-ferrous metal and normalizing involves a ferrous metal
Reheating allows grains to diffuse and structures to change
Slower cooling grows larger grains as they have more time to grow, vice versa
Alloys - A mixture of a metal and another metal or a metal and a non-metal
Alloys can harden a metal by disrupting its structure with differently sized atoms and not allowing grains to slide past each other as easily
Alloying usually increases tensile and compressive strength but reduces ductility and malleability
Pure iron is too soft and ductile but many alloys can be made with it
Work Hardening - Causes permanent distortion in metal while working it cold
Usually performed by striking metal flatter with a hammer
The striking flattens grains and makes them harder
Can cause internal stresses and compromise internal stability
Heating - Reverses internal stresses from work hardening by heating a metal to its crystal growth temperature, which would allow the grains to relax
Tempering - Hardens metal by heating it and quenching it in a pool of water or oil
Superalloy - Extremely durable alloy used at high temperatures, usually at or above 75% of its melting point
Creep and oxidation resistance are important criteria for superalloys
Creep - Gradual extension of a material under constant force, creep accelerates at higher temperatures
Oxidation - Occurs when oxygen gas is present or when exposed to an extremely high/low pH level
Recovery - The collection of used metal for reuse
Metals are infinitely recyclable and recycling them reduces the energy required to make new products
Glass
Glass is made of melted silica (sand) + an alkali that lowers the melting point
Characteristics - Hard, brittle, transparent, high compressive strength, high tensile strength, thermal insulator
Metal oxides are often added to glass to add color
GLASS IS AMORPHOUS - Has no definite structure
Laminated Glass - Layers of glass with a layer of thin plastic sandwiched between layers of glass. The plastic layers can absorb more energy because they are flexible, so the glass is stronger
Tempered Glass - A process that heats the glass and cools the outside faster than the inside, which causes internal stresses within the glass that place the inside under compression and the outside under tension.
Soda Glass - Poor glass in general, poor resistance to thermal shock
Pyrex - Borosilicate glass, less susceptible to thermal shock, used for cooking
Pharmaceutical - Glass’s non-porous nature makes it easy to clean and more chemically resistant
Recycling - Glass is infinitely recyclable
The process starts with crushing glass to a very fine powder called cullet
Reusing cullet in glass manufacturing reduces the energy cost and raw material usage
Note the difference between something green and biodegradable
Green - Simply helpful for the environment
Biodegradeable - Breaks down easily and is not harmful to the environment
Glass is green in that its use and reuse helps the environment by using less raw materials
Glass is not biodegradable as it takes a very long time (predicted to be >1,000,000 years) to break down, not easy