1st Reporter
1st Reporter
1st Reporter
AND ENGINEERING
REPORTER:
GLODOVE, MARIA RAIGNNER M.
BICOY, LOVELY
INTRODUCTION
The development of many technologies that make our existence so comfortable has
been intimately associated with the accessibility of suitable materials. An
advancement in the understanding of a material type is often the forerunner to the
stepwise progression of a technology.
MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
Sometimes it is useful to subdivide the discipline of materials science and
engineering into materials science and materials engineering subdisciplines. Strictly
speaking, materials science involves investigating the relationships that exist
between the structures and properties of materials (i.e., why materials have their
properties). In contrast, materials engineering involves, on the basis of these
structure–property correlations, designing or engineering the structure of a material
to produce a predetermined set of properties.
Virtually all important properties of solid materials may be grouped into six different
categories: mechanical, electrical, thermal, magnetic, optical, and deteriorative. For
each, there is a characteristic type of stimulus capable of provoking different responses.
These are noted as follows:
In addition to structure and properties, two other important components are involved
in the science and engineering of materials—namely, processing and performance.
With regard to the relationships of these four components, the structure of a material
depends on how it is processed. Furthermore, a material’s performance is a function of
its properties.
Structure is, at this point, a nebulous term that deserves some explanation. In brief,
the structure of a material usually relates to the arrangement of its internal
components. Structural elements may be classified on the basis of size and in this
regard there are several levels:
• Subatomic structure—involves electrons within the individual atoms, their energies
and interactions with the nuclei.
• Atomic structure—relates to the organization of atoms to yield molecules or crystals.
• Nanostructure—deals with aggregates of atoms that form particles (nanoparticles)
that have nanoscale dimensions (less that about 100 nm).
• Microstructure—those structural elements that are subject to direct observation
using some type of microscope (structural features having dimensions between 100 nm
and several millimeters).
• Macrostructure—structural elements that may be viewed with the naked eye.
WHY STUDY MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING?
Why do engineers and scientists study materials? Simply, because things engineers
design are made of materials. Many an applied scientist or engineer (e.g.,
mechanical, civil, chemical, electrical), is at one time or another exposed to a design
problem involving materials— for example, a transmission gear, the superstructure
for a building, an oil refinery component, or an integrated circuit chip. Of course,
materials scientists and engineers are specialists who are totally involved in the
investigation and design of materials. Many times, an engineer has the option of
selecting a best material from the thousands available. The final decision is normally
based on several criteria.
CLASSIFICATIONS OF MATERIALS
Solid materials have been conveniently grouped into three basic categories: metals,
ceramics, and polymers, a scheme based primarily on chemical makeup and atomic
structure. Most materials fall into one distinct grouping or another. In addition,
there are the composites that are engineered combinations of two or more
different materials. Another category is advanced materials—those used in high-
technology applications, such as semiconductors, biomaterials, smart materials, and
nanoengineered materials.
METALS
Metals are composed of one or more metallic element (e.g., iron, aluminum, copper,
titanium, gold, nickel), and often also nonmetallic elements (e.g., carbon, nitrogen,
oxygen) in relatively small amounts.9 Atoms in metals and their alloys are arranged in a
very orderly manner and are relatively dense in comparison to the ceramics and
polymers.
CERAMICS
Ceramics are compounds between metallic and nonmetallic elements; they are most
frequently oxides, nitrides, and carbides.
POLYMERS
Polymers include the familiar plastic and rubber materials. Many of them are organic
compounds that are chemically based on carbon, hydrogen, and other nonmetallic
elements.
COMPOSITES
A composite is composed of two (or more) individual materials that come from the
categories previously discussed—metals, ceramics, and polymers. The design goal of a
composite is to achieve a combination of properties that is not displayed by any single
material and also to incorporate the best characteristics of each of the component
materials.
THREE IMPORTANT ENGINEERING MATERIAL FAMILIES THAT
ARE INCLUDED. THESE ARE AS FOLLOWS:
SEMICONDUCTORS
Semiconductors have electrical properties that are intermediate between those of
electrical conductors (i.e., metals and metal alloys) and insulators (i.e., ceramics and
polymers).
BIOMATERIALS
Replacement implants are constructed of biomaterials—nonviable (i.e., nonliving)
materials that are implanted into the body, so that they function in a reliable, safe,
and physiologically satisfactory manner, while interacting with living tissue.
SMART MATERIALS
Smart (or intelligent) materials are a group of new and state-of-the-art materials
now being developed that will have a significant influence on many of our
technologies. The adjective smart implies that these materials are able to sense
changes in their environment and then respond to these changes in predetermined
manners—traits that are also found in living organisms.
NANOMATERIALS
One new material class that has fascinating properties and tremendous
technological promise is the nanomaterials, which may be any one of the four basic
types—metals, unlike these other materials, they are not distinguished on the basis
of their chemistry but rather their size; the nano prefix denotes that the dimensions
of these structural entities are on the order of a nanometer (10−9 m)—as a rule,
less than 100 nanometers.
OKBYE.