Materials Design
Materials Design
Materials Design
Class Objectives
Recognize the different types of metals used in aircraft and where they y are used Recognize that product form and heat treatment are directly related to material properties Develop D l ab basic i understanding d di of f the h relationship l i hi between materials properties and design properties and values
11-2
Wrought Products
Rolled Sheet and plate Shapes (BAC 1490 and so forth) Bar, rod, wire
Cast billet
Cast Products
Risers Cope
11-4
ST L LT
11-5
Cast ingot
Thermal homogenization
Scalp billet
Roll
Extrusions
ST
LT
11-7
Extrusions (continued)
Extruded shape
Die Ram
Billet
Extruded shape
Forgings
L LT
ST
11-9
Forgings (continued)
Forging steps
Extruded billet
P f Preform
Blocker
Finisher
11-10
Castings
11-11
11-12
Forging
Advantages
M Material t i l stronger t d due t to grain i flow (longitudinal properties around bends and fillets), higher allowables because of reduced cross section of starting stock Machining time reduced (or eliminated for many precision forgings) Unit price less than hogout in many cases
Disadvantages
Ch Changes t to configuration fi ti can be costly Fay y surfaces and bores, , threads, and more may require subsequent machining
11-13
Casting
Advantages
C Complex l configurations fi ti are created once in the pattern or mold, and come free in the final product by the simple act of pouring molten metal Hollow features or internal passageways possible Almost always the least expensive method
Disadvantages
C Cast t material t i l allowables ll bl not t as high as wrought material Changes g to configuration g can be costly
11-14
Hogout
Advantages
Precision P i i t tolerances l available il bl Minor configuration changes do not affect tooling g Short cycle times possible, high-speed machine centers reduce d spindle i dl ti time Least costly for small order base parts p
Disadvantages
Hi High h material t i l waste t in i the th form of chips Complex p configurations g with many setups very costly, no hollow features
11-15
Forging Process
Billet
Preform
Finisher
11-16
Precision forging
Conventional forging
Hand forging
P/L of no draft forging Blocker- and conventional-type Forgings Permit some amount of excess thickness and 3 to 10 draft angle to final shape of parts
11-17
10,000 9 000 9,000 8,000 Tota al cost/part t, $ 7,000 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1 000 1,000 0 0 25 50 75 100 125 150 175 200 Production quantities
Design and Analysis of Aircraft Structures
11-18
Precision
11-19
Benefits
Cost savings
Weight reduction
Reduced parts
Aluminum Alloys
Miscellaneous 1% C Composite it 11% Titanium 7%
Steel 11%
Aluminum 70%
777 Model
Design and Analysis of Aircraft Structures
11-21
Pressurized skin 2524 Unpressurized skin 7075 Frames, stringers Frames 7075 and 7150 Upper skins and stringers 7055
11-22
7075
Major alloy element Assigned when the alloy is registered Modification of the original alloy
Design and Analysis of Aircraft Structures
11-23
Major Alloying Element Unalloyed aluminum Copper Manganese Silicon Magnesium Magnesium and silicon Zinc
11-24
A356 0 A356.0
Modification alloy designator Alloy group Ingot identifier Alloy registration
Design and Analysis of Aircraft Structures
11-25
11-26
7075 T6 7075-T6
Material designation Temper designation
Design and Analysis of Aircraft Structures
11-27
C diti Condition Annealed Solution treated and quenched (unstable) As fabricated Strain hardened Heat treated
11-28
11-29
-T6 511
Standard heat-treat designation. Material has been stress relieved after quench and before aging. Indicates minor straightening after stretching to meet straightness and flatness tolerances. This digit is 0 if no straightening is allowed after stretching. Material was stretched to accomplish stress relief. This digit is 2 when compressive methods are used.
11-30
Ferrous Alloys
Miscellaneous 1% C Composite it 11% Titanium 7%
Steel 12%
Aluminum 70%
777 Model
Design and Analysis of Aircraft Structures
11-31
11-32
11-33
4340
Primary alloying elements (Ni, Cr, Mo) Percent carbon in tenths (0.40)
Design and Analysis of Aircraft Structures
11-34
304
Typeaustenitic Assigned when alloy is registered
Design and Analysis of Aircraft Structures
11-35
15 5PH 15-5PH
Cr content (15%) Ni content (5%) Precipitation hardening
Design and Analysis of Aircraft Structures
11-37
Titanium Alloys
Miscellaneous 1% C Composite it 11%
Titanium 6%
Steel 11%
Aluminum 70%
777 Model
Design and Analysis of Aircraft Structures
11-39
Hydraulic tubing Main landing gear-actuator support fitting (2 places) Forward landing-gear trunnion bearing housing Springs
11-40
Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-2Mo
130 ksi k i (annealed ( l d condition) diti ) Structure exposed to high temperature
11-41
Ti-6Al-4V
Structural fittings: 120 to 135 ksi (annealed condition) Fasteners: 160 ksi (solution-treated and aged-condition)
11-42
Ti-15V-3Cr-3Al-3Sn
150 ksi (solution-treated and - age condition) Formed sheet, castings, pneumatic ducts
Ti-3Al-8V-6Cr-4Mo-4Zr
More than 180 ksi ( (solution treated and - aged g condition) ) Springs (tension and compression)
11-43
U Upper surface f Skin (7xxx plate) Stringer (7xxx extr) Compression strength, damage tolerance Compression strength
Ribs Shear-tied (7xxx plate) Intermediate (7xxx sheet) Shear strength Stiffness, shear Stiffness shear, strength
Fuselage Monocoque Skin (2xxx sheet) Stringer (7xxx sheet) Frames (7xxx sheet) Floors Beams (extrusion, sheet) Seat track Static strength, corrosion resistance Static strength, corrosion resistance Fatigue, damage tolerance, corrosion resistance Fatigue, compression strength Stiffness, fatigue, compression strength
Stabilizer Lower Surface Skin (7xxx plate) Stringer (2xxx extrusion) Static strength Corrosion resistance, static strength
Upper Surface Skin (2xxx plate) Stringer (2xxx extrusion) Tension strength, damage tolerance Tension strength Fin Skin (7xxx plate) Stringer (7xxx extrusion Compression strength, damage tolerance Compression strength
11-44
Compression
Shear
Durability Fatigue Design service objective with high level of reliability Corrosion Damage Tolerance Crack Growth Damage must be found before g critical. For composite p becoming material, structure must demonstrate no detrimental growth with visible flaw. Must carry limit load with large damage Fatigue crack growth characteristics CAI compression after impact Inspection intervals & methods Fatigue strength, open hole, notched specimen, low load & high load transfer joint coupons K1scc, SCC threshold and exfoliation rating Low load and high load transfer joint coupons data most reliable for material evaluation For composite, cycling to validate no growth. Heavy reliance on service experience
Residual Strength
Kapp for low Toughness or wide panels, Fty for high toughness narrow parts Hc for wide panels, CAI for local areas
Weight/Cost Minimize within constraints Density, material costs Fabrication and maintenance costs must be accounted for
11-45
Failure Mode
Stiffness
Es Es
o c
Crack growth
Pc Po
F ty 45 o F ty 45 c
Residual strength
Pc Po
11-46
17%
13%
12%
14% 11%
82%
81%
78%
80% 70%
727
737
757
767
777
11-47
11-48
11-49
11-50
Notes
Advanced metalic alloys were developed for B i 787 Boeing GLARE, Aluminum Lithium , laser welded skin/stringer s /st ge panels pa e s (60 (6013), 3), a and d FSW-Friction S ct o Stir St Weldeding are used on Airbus 380
11-51
Summary
Develop or select the right alloy for the application S l t the Select th appropriate i t product d t form f Select the proper temper or strength level Consider materials properties and their relevance to performance criteria for a given application Consider how the material and material properties affect product performance and cost (recurring and non-recurring) New materials applications must be thoroughly evaluated prior to design usage
11-52