Exercises Exerciseswithworkedsolutions Ma Uoc en
Exercises Exerciseswithworkedsolutions Ma Uoc en
Exercises Exerciseswithworkedsolutions Ma Uoc en
Worked Solutions
M. F. Ashby, 2010
For reproduction guidance see back page
This compilation of Exercises with worked solutions is a part of a set of teaching resources created by Mike Ashby to help introduce students to materials,
processes and rational selection.
The Teaching Resources website aims to support teaching of materials-related courses in Design, Engineering and Science.
Resources come in various formats and are aimed primarily at undergraduate education. Some of them are open access.
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Adapted from the Solution Manual to Materials selection in mechanical design, 4 edition,
Prof. Mike Ashby Engineering Department, University of Cambridge, CB2 1PZ.
Contents
E1. Introduction to exercises
E2. Material evolution in products
E3. Devising concepts
E4. Using material properties
E5. Using material selection charts
E6. Translation: constraints and objectives
E7. Deriving and using material indices
E8. Multiple constraints and objectives
E9. Selecting material and shape
E10. Hybrid materials
E11. Selecting processes
E12. Materials and the environment
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3.
The early exercises are easy. Those that follow lead the reader
through the use of material properties and simple solutions to
mechanics problems, drawing on data and results contained in the
CES EduPack and the booklet Useful Approximate Solutions to
Standard Problems (UASSP which can be found as an open access
resource on the teaching resource website.) ; the use of material
property charts; techniques for the translation of design requirement to
identify constraints and objectives; the derivation of indices, screening
and ranking, multi-objective optimization; coupled choice of material
and shape; devising hybrids; and the choice of materials to meet
environmental criteria.
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Devising concepts
Concept
E3.1 Concepts and embodiments for dust removers. The need for
a device to remove household dust has many established
solutions. You can read about the various ways this problem has
been solved in the last 100 or more years by searching the
Internet.
Now is the time for more creative thinking. Devise as many
concepts to meet this need as you can. Nothing, at the concept
stage, is too far-fetched; decisions about practicality and cost
come later, at the detailed stage. List concepts and outline
embodiments as block diagrams like this:
C2 Entrain in air
stream,
Embodiment
C3 Entrain in air
stream,
Concept
Embodiment
C5 Trap dust on
adhesive strip
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Embodiment
Concept
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Answer. The torque at the onset of yield for a thick walled tube is
F L3
bt3
with
I =
3EI
12
The mean Youngs modulus E for aluminum is 75 GPa. Inserting the
data from the question results in an end deflection = 6.7 mm.
E4.2 A spring, wound from stainless steel wire with a wire diameter
d = 1mm, has n = 20 turns of radius R = 10 mm. How much will it
extend when loaded with a mass P of 1 kg? Assume the shear
modulus G of stainless steel to be 3/8 E where E is Youngs modulus
(from the data in the CES EduPack), and use the expression for the
extension of springs from UASSP, 6 to find out.
Answer. The extension u of a spring under a force F = Pg = 9.81 N
(here g is the acceleration due to gravity) is
u =
64 F R 3 n
Gd4
Youngs modulus for stainless steel is 200 GPa, so shear modulus
G 76 GPa. Inserting the data gives a deflection u = 10.4 mm.
torque at onset of yield from UASSP, 6 and that for the polar moment of a
thick walled tube from UASSP, 2 to find out.
Tf =
K y
2 ro
with
K =
( ro4 ri4 )
gives a nominal stress for first yield of 11.9 MPa. Stress concentrations
can be very damaging in this example, a cyclic stress of only 12 MPa
will ultimately initiate a fatigue crack at the notch root.
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and
-3
Answer. The crack length is small compared with the width of the
window, so the appropriate choice of equation describing crack
instability is
C a K 1c
with
C = 1 .0
Inserting the data we find the length of the shortest crack that is just
unstable:
2
2K
2a = 1c = 2.1 mm, using (K 1c ) PMMA = 1.15 MPa.m1/2
Thus the 0.5mm crack will not propagate.
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and is the material density and C m the material cost per kg. Data
from the CES EduPack are assembled below, using the means of the
ranges..
How does your result compare with the listed value in the CES
EduPack?
Answer. The distance x that heat diffuses in a time t is
approximately
x =
2at
with
a =
Density
3
kg/m
Price
$/kg
Cast iron
7150
0.66
4719
Nylon
1130
3.45
3900
Surprisingly, the nylon casing has a lower material cost than that made
of cast iron.
Cp
( a is the thermal diffusivity). Inserting the data from the question and
3
the mean values = 950 kg/m and C p = 1850 J/kg/K, we find
0.44 W/m.K. The result given in the CES EduPack for the thermal
conductivity of PE is 0.403 0.435 W/m.K.
E4.9 It is proposed to replace the cast iron casing of a power tool with
one with precisely the same dimension molded from nylon. Will the
material cost of the nylon casing be greater or less than that made of
cast iron? Use data from the CES EduPack to find out.
Answer. If the dimensions of the cast iron and nylon cases are the
same, the volume of material required to make them are equal. Thus the
cheaper option is the one with the lower material cost per unit volume
C v , where
Cv = Cm
and is the material density and C m the material cost per kg. Data
from the CES EduPack are assembled below, using the means of the
ranges..
Cv = Cm
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E5.2
The 20 exercises in this section involve the simple use of the charts
that can be created using the CES EduPack to find materials with given
property profiles. This involves first creating the chart, then applying the
appropriate box or line selection and reading off the materials that lie
on the appropriate side of the line. It is a good idea to present the
results as a table. You can copy this table from the CES EduPack.
Answer. There are only three materials with modulus E > 50 GPa
and density < 2000 kg/m3.
E5.1
Material
Cast and Wrought
Magnesium alloys
Answer. Metals that are stiffer than brass are listed in the table.
Material
Steels
Nickel alloys
Tungsten alloys
Comment
Magnesium is the lightest of all common
structural metals only beryllium is lighter,
but it is very expensive and its oxide is
toxic.
CFRP is both lighter and stiffer than
magnesium. That is one reason it is used
for competition cars and bikes.
Comment
The cheapest stiff, strong structural metal,
widely used.
More expensive than steel
Refractory (high-melting) and relatively
expensive
Answer. (a) No metals in Figure 4.3 are both stiffer and less dense
than steel, though nickel alloys come close. (b) Several ceramics
qualify: Boron carbide, B4C, silicon carbide, SiC, silicon nitride
Si3N4, aluminium nitride AlN and alumina Al203.
Material
Alumina Al203
Silicon nitride Si3N4
Boron carbide, B4C
Silicon carbide, SiC
Aluminium Nitride,
AlN
10
Comment
Alumina is the most widely used of all
technical ceramics (spark plugs, circuit
boardsO) All ceramics are brittle they
have low values of fracture toughness K1c
and toughness G1c .
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Use a E- chart to identify metals with both E > 100 GPa and
E/ > 0.02 GPa/(kg/m3).
E5.5
Answer. The chart shows the selection. The metals that lie in the
search area are listed in the table.
Material
Steels
Nickel alloys
Titanium alloys
Comment
Cheap, widely used. Stiff structural material.
More expensive than steel
Titanium alloys are very expensive.
Answer. The chart shows the selection. The materials that lie in the
search area are listed in the table. No metals survive.
Material
Comment
Carbon-fiber composites excel in stiffness
at low weight.
Boron carbide is exceptionally stiff, hard
and light; it is used for body armour.
CFRP
Boron carbide, B4C
E1/3/
= 0.003
E/
=
0.02
Search area
Search area
E = 100
E = 100
Slope 3
11
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E5.7
E/ (GPa/(kg/m ) x 10
8 - 29
0.7 4.0
1.8 2.5
Titanium alloys
Steels
f / (MPa/(kg/m3)) x 103
54 - 270
32 - 190
Material
E 5.8
Material
High strength steels
High strength nickel alloys
Titanium alloys
CFRP
E5.9
Comment
12
1/2
K1c (MPa.m )
2.1 4.6
1.2 4.3
0.7 1.1
3.3 4.8
G1c (kJ/m )
0.5 - 8
1-8
0.25 0.7
0.04 0.07
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Comment
E5.11 The elastic deflection at fracture (the resilience) of an elasticbrittle solid is proportional to the failure strain, fr = fr / E ,
where fr is the stress that will cause a crack to propagate:
K
fr = 1c
c
Here K 1c is the fracture toughness and c is the length of the
longest crack the materials may contain. Thus
1 K 1c
fr =
c E
Materials that can deflect elastically without fracturing are
therefore those with large values of K 1c / E . Use a K1c E chart
to identify the class of materials with K 1c > 1 MPa.m
values of K 1c / E .
1/2
and high
2
4 1 K Ic
R f
M =
K 12c
13
Comment
Traditional material for pressure vessels.
Used for nuclear pressure vessels.
Small boilers are made of copper.
Tin is used in storage tanks for pharmaceutical
chemical solutions
Reactors for chemical engineering and turbine
combustion chambers are made of nickel based
alloys.
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H 3 y
where f is the strength. Use a K 1c f chart to identify three
1/2
and the highest possible
materials that have K 1c > 30 MPa m
strength. To do this, position a " K 1c " selection line at 30 MPa
1/2
m
and then adjust a "strength" selection line such that it just
admits three candidates. Use a strength cost per volume chart
to rank your selection by material cost, hence making a final
selection.
Comment
Traditional material for blades
Meets the requirements, but more
expensive than steel
Meets the requirements, but MUCH more
expensive than steel.
Material
Comment
E5.15 The window through which the beam emerges from a highpowered laser must obviously be transparent to light. Even then, some
of the energy of the beam is absorbed in the window and can cause it to
heat and crack. This problem is minimized by choosing a window
material with a high thermal conductivity (to conduct the heat away)
and a low expansion coefficient (to reduce thermal strains), that is, by
seeking a window material with a high value of
M = /
Use a chart to identify the best material for an ultra-high powered
laser window.
14
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Material
Soda glass
Comment
M = 3 x 105 W/m; poor resistance to thermal
pulse
Silica glass
Answer. The chart shows just two classes of polymer with maximum
0
service temperatures greater than 200 C. They are listed below.
Material
Comment
Polytetrafluorethylene, PTFE (Teflon) is used as non-stick
PTFE
coatings for cooking ware, easily surviving
the temperatures of baking and frying.
Silicone elastomers
Silicones are polymers with a Si-O-Si chain
structure instead of the C-C-C chain of
polyolefins. They are more stable than
carbon-based polymers, but expensive.
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Function
Constraints
Objective
What is to be maximized or
minimized?
Free
variables
course, minimizing mass and cost are both objectives, and then tradeoff methods are needed.
They come later. For now use judgement to choose the single most
important objective and make all others into constraints.
Two rules-of-thumb, useful in many translation exercises. Many
applications require sufficient fracture toughness for the component
can survive mishandling and accidental impact during service; a totally
brittle material (like un-toughened glass) is unsuitable. Then a
necessary constraint is that of adequate toughness. This is achieved
by requiring that the fracture toughness K 1c > 15 MPa.m 1 / 2 . Other
applications require some ductility, sufficient to allow stress
redistribution under loading points, and some ability to bend or shape
the material plastically. This is achieved by requiring that the (tensile)
ductility f > 2% .
The CES EduPack software can be used to impose the constraints
and to rank the survivors using the objective.
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Function
Constraints
Objective
Free variables
Objective
Free variables
Choice of material
E6.3
Scissors
High hardness
Answer. The obvious constraints here are those on servicetemperature, corrosion resistance, the ability to conduct heat
well and strength. There are manufacturing constraints too: if
the heat exchanger is to be made from tubes or folded sheet, the
material must be available in these forms, and have sufficient
ductility to allow manufacture.
Function
Constraints
Heat exchanger
Maximum service temperature, Tmax > 120 C
Good thermal conductor
Resistance to corrosion in salt water:
good/excellent
Sufficient strength to support the pressure of
the super-heated water
Ability to be rolled to sheet or tube
Adequate ductility to allow shaping, f > 2%
Objective
Free variables
17
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x2
2a
Function
Constraints
Objective
Choice of material
Free variables
E6.5
q =
Figure E1.
T
x
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Objective
Free variables
Choice of material
Objective
Free variables
Rocking bearing
Maximum service temperature, Tmax > 100 C
Good electrical conductor
Good resistance to fluorine gas
High modulus, E
Maximize hardness H of bearing faces
Choice of material
E6.7 The standard CD (Jewel case) cracks easily and, if broken, can
scratch the CD. Jewel cases are made of injection molded
polystyrene, chosen because it is transparent, cheap and easy to
mold. A material is sought to make CD cases that do not crack so
easily. The case must still be transparent, able to be injection
molded, and able to compete with polystyrene in cost.
Answer. The question expresses constraints on transparency,
moldablity and fracture toughness (it must be greater than that of
polystyrene). Given these, the cheapest material is the best
choice.
Function
Constraints
Objective
Free variables
Figure E2
19
Improved CD case
Optically transparent
Fracture toughness greater than that of
polystyrene
Able to be injection molded
Choice of material
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Q = C p ( T To )
and C p is the specific heat of the material of the core (in J/kg.C)
3
and is its density (in kg/m ). Thus the most compact storage
heater is one made from a material with a high C p . Even a
small storage heater contains a considerable quantity of core (that
is why they are heavy), so it is probable that an objective will be to
minimize its cost per unit volume. If, however, space were critical,
maximizing C p might become the objective.
Function
Objective
Free variables
Choice of material
Constraints
20
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E7.1 Aperture grills for cathode ray tubes (Figure E3). There are
two types of cathode ray tube (CRT). In the older technology,
colour separation is achieved by using a shadow mask: a thin
metal plate with a grid of holes that allow only the correct beam to
strike a red, green or blue phosphor. A shadow mask can heat up
and distort at high brightness levels (doming), causing the beams
to miss their targets, and giving a blotchy image.
Function
Constraints
Objective
Free variables
Choice of material
Answer.
The model. A thin, taut wire slackens and sags when the strain
due to thermal expansion,
th = T
exceeds the elastic strain caused by the pre-tension,
pt =
.
E
Figure E3
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T =
f
.
E
M =
f
.
E
Comment
Carbon steel is ferro-magnetic, so will interact
with the scanning magnetic fields reject.
Extracting titanium from its oxide is difficult
making it an expensive option
A logical choice tungsten has a high melting
point and is routinely produced as fine wire
Many nickel alloys are weakly ferromagnetic
reject for the same reason as carbon steel
F L3
3 EI
and that for the deflection of a beam under a distributed load f
per unit length:
1 f L4
8 EI
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M = E / 2 . (Figure E4c.)
(d) Show that the lightest cantilever beam of length L and square
section (area free) that will not deflect by more than under an
end load F is that made of the material with the largest value of
M = E 1 / 2 / (neglect self weight). (Figure E4d.)
Answer.
The model. The point of this problem is that the material index
depends on the mode of loading, on the geometric constraints
and on the design objective.
(a) The table lists the design requirements for part (a) of the
problem.
Function
Constraints
Length L specified
Section t x t specified
End load F specified
Objective
Free variables
F L3
3 EI
= 4
F L3 1
t4 E
Figure E4
Function
Constraints
Length L specified
Section t x t specified
Objective
Free variables
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f = gt2
where is the density of the beam material and g is the
acceleration due to gravity. Such a load produces a deflection
(UASSP, 3)
3 f L4
=
2 E t4
3 g L4
=
2t2 E
m =
3 g L5 2
2 E
M3 =
M2 =
(d) The design requirements for part (d) are listed below
Function
Constraints
Length L specified
End-load F specified
(c) The design requirements for part (c) are listed below
Function
Objective
Constraints
Length L specified
Maximum deflection, , specified
Free variables
Choice of material
Objective
Section area A = t 2
Free variables
Choice of material
Section area A = t 2
m = t2L
The beam deflects under its own weight but now the section can
be varied to reduce the weight provided the deflection does not
exceed , as in the figure. The objective function (the quantity to
be minimized) is the mass m of the beam
= 4
F L3 1
t4 E
m = t2 L
F L5
m = 2
24
1/ 2
1/ 2
E
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M4 =
E1/ 2
Material choice
Metals: tungsten alloys, nickel alloys, steels.
Ceramics: SiC, Si3N4, B4C, Al2O3 and AlN, but of
course all are brittle.
Metals: aluminum, magnesium, nickel and
titanium alloys and steels all have almost the
same value of E /
High M1 = E
High M 2 =
High M 3 =
High M 4 =
2
E
1/ 2
Ff =
Composites: CFRP
All technical ceramics
Metals: aluminum and magnesium alloys superior
to all other metals.
Composites: CFRP excels
Ceramics: SiC, Si3N4, B4C, Al2O3 and AlN
Figure E5
Function
Constraints
Objective
Free variables
I f
ym L
25
Beam
Length L is specified
Cross-section area, A
Choice of material
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F L
A = 6
f
2/3
m = (6 F )2/3 L5 / 3
2/3
f
The mass is minimized by selecting materials with the largest
values of the index
M=
Comment
Exceptionally good, mainly because of
its very low density.
Here the light alloys out-perform steel
2/3
f
Fcrit =
K 1c > 15 MPa .m 1 / 2
n2 2 E I
H2
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Function
Constraints
Objective
Free variables
Cylindrical column
Length L is specified
Cross-section area, A
Choice of material
Material
Ceramics: brick,
concrete, cement and
stone
Wood
Carbon steel, cast iron
Figure E6
Answer.
The model. A slender column uses less material than a fat one,
and thus is cheaper; but it must not be so slender that it will buckle
under the design load, F. The objective function is the cost
C = A H Cm
*
4F
C
1/2
C
H 2 m
E 1/2
Comment
The low cost and fairly high modulus
makes these the top-ranked candidates.
Exceptional stiffness parallel to the grain,
and cheap.
Steel out-performs all other metals when
strength at low cost is sought.
E7.5 Indices for stiff plates and shells (Figure E7). Aircraft and
space structures make use of plates and shells. The index
depends on the configuration. Here you are asked to derive the
material index for
(a) a circular plate of radius a carrying a central load W with a
prescribed stiffness S = W / and of minimum mass, and
(b) a hemispherical shell of radius a carrying a central load W with
a prescribed stiffness S = W / and of minimum mass, as shown
in the figures.
M=
E1 2
Cm
Cm is the cost/kg of the processed material, here, the material in the form of a
circular rod or column.
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Circular plate:
3 Wa
3 +
( 1 2 )
4 E t3
1 +
Wa
Et2
( 1
Constraints
Objective
Free variables
3 S a2
m = a2
Hemispherical shell = A
Function
Answer.
(a) The plate. The objective is to minimize the mass, m
3 S a2
t =
4 E
1 / 3 f ( )
E
The lightest plate is that made from a material with a large value of
the index
M1 =
E1/ 3
m = 2 a2 t
Inverting the second equation in the question gives, for the shell,
Sa
t = A
1/ 2
f 2 ( )
m = 2 a 2 ( A S a )1 / 2
f ( )
E1/ 2
m = a2 t
where is the density of the material of which the plate is made.
The thickness t is free, but must be sufficient to meet the
constraint on stiffness. Inverting the first equation in the question
gives, for the plate,
1/ 3
The lightest shell is that made from a material with a large value of
the index
M2 =
1/ 3
f 1 ( )
E1/ 2
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High M 1 =
High M 2 =
Material choice
E1/ 3
1/ 2
x2
t
2a
where the thermal diffusivity a = / C p and is the thermal
conductivity, the density and C p the specific heat.
Figure E8
The time to reach thermal equilibrium is reduced by making the
section x thinner, but it must not be so thin that it fails in service.
Use this constraint to eliminate x in the equation above, thereby
deriving a material index for the clamp. Use the fact that the
clamping force F creates a moment on the body of the clamp of
M = F L , and that the peak stress in the body is given by
xM
2 I
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FL
x = 6
b f
Inserting this into the equation for the time to reach equilibrium
gives
F L 1
t =3
b a f
The time is minimized by choosing materials with large values of
the index
M = a f .
Additional constraints on modulus E > 50 GPa (to ensure that the
clamp is sufficiently stiff) on fracture toughness K 1c > 18 MPa.m 1 / 2
(to guard against accidental impact) and on formability will, in
practice, be needed.
Material
Aluminum alloys
Copper alloys
Figure E9
Comment
The obvious candidate good thermal
conductor, adequately stiff and strong, and easy
to work.
Here the high thermal diffusivity of copper is
dominating the selection.
Function
Constraints
Objective
Free variables
30
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Equations (2) and (3) can now be solved for t and b, and these
substituted back into (1). The result is
E
2
m = 9 S max
L
2f
1 F L3
=
48 E I
and that for the deflection at which failure occurs
2
1f L
max =
6 tE
M =
2f
E
Answer.
The model. The objective function the quantity to be minimized
is the mass m of the spring:
m = bt L
(1)
Material
Elastomers (rubber)
Comment
Oops! we have missed a constraint here.
Elastomers excel as light springs, but the
constraint on thickness t and depth b in this
application translates via equation (2) into an
additional constraint on modulus:
E > SL3 / 4bt 3 .
Titanium alloys
S =
= 48
EI
L3
= 4
E bt3
L3
(2)
CFRP
High carbon steel
(3)
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q =
(Ts Ti )
x
x (2a t )1 / 2
Figure E10
Objective
Free
variables
This is tricky. Heat enters the surface of the fin by transfer from
the gas. If the heat transfer coefficient is h, the heat flux per unit
area is
q = h ( T g Ts )
where Ts is the surface temperature of the fin the critical
quantity we wish to minimize. Heat is diffuses into the fin surface
by thermal conduction.
q = C p 1/ 2
(Ts Ti )
2t
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Ts =
h Tg
t +
C p Ti
t +
Cp
M1 = C p
and index that often appears in problems involving transient heat flow.
Melting is also made less likely by choosing a material with a high
melting point Tm . The second index is therefore
M 2 = Tm
The selection. The figure shows the two indices, created using the
CES EduPack Level 2 database. The top-ranked candidates are listed
below.
Material
Silicon carbide, SiC
Copper alloys
Aluminum alloys
Aluminum Silicon
carbide MMC
Comment
Silicon carbide out-performs all metals except
tungsten, and is much lighter. If used, its
brittleness would have to be reckoned with..
The exceptional thermal conductivity of copper
is dominating here it is able to conduct heat
away from the surface quickly, limiting the
surface heating.
An attractive choice, since Al-alloys are also
light
This metal matrix composite has almost the
thermal conductivity of aluminum and is stiffer
and stronger.
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Figure E11
Function
Tie rod
Constraints
Z = C + m
C
m
+ *
Co
mo
in which the subscript o means properties of the existing material and
the asterisk * on Z* and * is a reminder that both are now
*
dimensionless. The relative exchange constant measures the
fractional gain in value for a given fractional gain in performance.
Z* =
Objective
Free variables
(a) Establish two performance equations for the mass, one for
each constraint, from which two material indices and one coupling
equation linking them are derived. Show that the two indices are
M1 =
and
M2 =
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Figure E12
Answer. The derivation of performance equations and the indices they contain is laid out here:
Objective
Constraints
Performance equation
Index
Substitute for A
Stiffness constraint
E A
L
F
m1 = L2
E
M1 =
m2 = L F
y
M2 =
(1)
m= AL
Substitute for A
Strength constraint F = y A
35
(2)
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Coupling
condition
Material choice
Comment
L/ = 100
L/ = 1000
= L
Coupling
lines
= 10 - 3
L
= 10 -2
L
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M1 =
and
M2 =
K 1c
Function
Constraints
Pressure vessel
Objective
Free variables
(b) Use the EduPack to produce a graph with the two material
indices as axes, like in Figure E14. The coupling equation
expresses the relationship between M1 and M2 and therefore Log
M1 and Log M2 and can be plotted as a straight line on the Log
M1Log M2 chart. Determine the gradient and intercept of this line
and plot it for first c= 5mm and then c= 5 m. Identify the lightest
candidate materials for the vessel for each case. M1 and M2 need
to be minimised to find the lightest material.
Minimize mass m
Wall thickness, t
Choice of material
p R
2t
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Figure E14
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m = 4 R 2t
The tensile stress in the wall of a thin-walled pressure vessel (UASSP, 11) is
p R
2t
Equating this first to the yield strength y , then to the fracture strength K 1c / c and substituting for t in
the objective function leads to the performance equations and indices laid out below.
Objective
Constraints
Yield constraint
pR
2 t
Performance equation
m1 = 2 p.R 3
y
Index
M1 =
(1)
Substitute for t
m = 4 R 2t
Fracture constraint
pR
2 t
K 1c
m 2 = 2 p R 3 ( c )1 / 2
K 1c
M2 =
(2)
K 1c
Substitute for t
The coupling equation is found by equating m1 to m2, giving a relationship between M1 and M2:
M 1 = ( c)1/2 M 2
On the (logarithmic) graph of the material indices, the coupling line therefore is log M1 = log ( c)
1/2
+ log M2
1/2
The position of the coupling line depends on the detection limit, c1 for cracks, through the term ( c) .
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Coupling line,
c = 5 microns
Coupling condition
Crack length
c 5 mm
Material choice
from Figure E14
Titanium alloys
Aluminium alloys
Steels
( c = 0.125 )
Crack length
c 5 m
( c = 3.96 x 10 3 )
CFRP
Silicon carbide
Silicon nitride
Alumina
Coupling line,
c = 5 mm
Comment
These are the standard
materials for pressure
vessels. Steels appear,
despite their high density,
because their toughness
and strength are so high
Ceramics, potentially, are
attractive structural
materials, but the difficulty
of fabricating and
maintaining them with no
flaws greater than 5 m is
enormous
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Function
Constraints
Objective
Free variables
C
M 1 = m
c
and
C
M2 = m
E 1/2
Figure E15
Column
Must not fail by compressive crushing
Must not buckle
Height H and compressive load F specified.
Minimize material cost C
Diameter D
Choice of material
Material
Density
3
(kg/m )
Cost/kg
Cm ($/kg)
Modulus
E (MPa)
Wood (spruce)
Brick
Granite
Poured concrete
Cast iron
Structural steel
Al-alloy 6061
700
2100
2600
2300
7150
7850
2700
0.5
0.35
0.6
0.08
0.25
0.4
1.2
10,000
22,000
20,000
20,000
130,000
210,000
69,000
Compression
strength
c (MPa)
25
95
150
13
200
300
150
(c) Use the EduPack to produce a graph with the two indices as
axes. Express M2 in terms of M1 and plot coupling lines for
5
selecting materials for a column with F = 10 N and H = 3m (the
3
same conditions as above), and for a second column with F = 10
N and H = 20m.
(3) Identify the material indices M1 and M2 that enter the two equations
for the mass, showing that they are
41
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C =
D 2 H Cm
where D is the diameter (the free variable) and H the height of the
column, Cm is the cost per kg of the material and is its density. The
column must not crush, requiring that
4F
D2
2 EI
H2
Figure E16
I=
4
D
64
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Constraint
Performance equation
Substitute for D
Crushing constraint
C =
Ff
D2
4
C
C1 = F H m
c
(1)
D 2 H Cm
Substitute for D
Buckling constraint F
2 EI
H2
3 D4 E
64 H 2
C2 =
1/2
C
F 1/2 H 2 m
E 1/2
(2)
C
The first performance equation contains the index M 1 = m , the second, the index
c
C
~
M 2 = m . This is a min-max problem: we seek the material with the lowest (min) cost C
1/2
E
which itself is the larger (max) of C1 and C2. The two performance equations are evaluated in
~
the Table, which also lists C = max ( C 1 , C 2 ). for a column of height H = 3m, carrying a load F =
5
10 N. The cheapest choice is concrete.
Material
Wood (spruce)
Brick
Granite
Poured concrete
Cast iron
Structural steel
Al-alloy 6061
Density
3
(kg/m )
Cost/kg
Cm ($/kg)
Modulus
E (MPa)
700
2100
2600
2300
7150
7850
2700
0.5
0.35
0.6
0.08
0.25
0.4
1.2
10,000
22,000
20,000
20,000
130,000
210,000
69,000
Compressio
n
strength
c (MPa)
25
95
150
13
200
300
150
43
C1
$
C2
$
~
C
4.2
2.3
3.1
4.3
2.6
3.0
6.5
11.2
16.1
35.0
4.7
16.1
21.8
39.5
11.2
16.1
35.0
4.7
16.1
21.8
39.5
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M2 =
1/2
2
F
H2
1/ 2
M1
log
M 2 = log M 1 + log
1/2
2
F
2
H
1/ 2
It contains the structural loading coefficient F/H . Two positions for the coupling line are shown, one
2
2
5
2
corresponding to a low value of F/H = 0.011 MN/m (F = 10 N, H = 3 m) and to a high one F/H =
2
7
2.5 MN/m (F = 10 N, H = 2 m), with associated solutions. Remember that, since E and c are
measured in MPa, the load F must be expressed in units of MN. The selection is listed in the table.
Couplin
g
Large F/H
Small F/H
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Objectives
Free variables
Minimize mass m
Wall thickness, t
Choice of material
where is the density, y the yield strength and Cm the cost per kg
of the material, and the subscript o indicates values for mild
steel.
(b) Explore the trade-off between relative cost and relative mass,
considering the replacement of a mild steel tank with one made,
first, of low alloy steel, and, second, one made of filament-wound
CFRP, using the material properties in the table below. Define a
relative penalty function
Z* = *
m
C
+
mo
Co
Density
3
(kg/m )
7850
7850
1550
Yield strength
c (MPa)
314
775
760
(c) Use the EduPack to produce a graph with axes of m/mo and C/Co,
like the one in Figure E18 below. Mild steel (here labelled Low
carbon steel) lies at the co-ordinates (1,1).
*
Figure E17
(a) Show that the mass and material cost of the tank relative to one
made of low-carbon steel are given by
m
=
y
mo
y ,o
and
y ,o
C
= Cm
y C m ,o o
Co
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2R 2 L p ( 1 + Q )
y
The material cost C is simply the mass m times the cost per kg of the
material, Cm, giving
C
C = C m m = 2R 2 L p ( 1 + Q ) m
y
from which the mass and cost relative to that of a low-carbon steel
(subscript o) tank are
m
=
y
mo
y ,o
y ,o
C
= Cm
y C m ,o o
Co
and
Z* = *
Figure E18
Answer. (a) The mass m of the tank is
m = 2R L t + 4 R 2 t = 2R L t ( 1 + Q )
where Q, the aspect ratio 2R/L, is fixed by the design requirements. The
stress in the wall of the tank caused by the pressure p must not exceed y ,
is the yield strength of the material of the tank wall, meaning that
pR
y
t
m
C
+
mo
Co
This is evaluated for Low alloy steel and for CFRP in the table below, for
* = 1 (meaning that weight carries a low cost premium) Low alloy
steel has by far the lowest Z*. But when it is evaluated for * = 100
(meaning that weight carriers a large cost premium), CFRP has the
lowest Z*.
(c) The figure shows the trade-off surface. Materials on or near this
surface have attractive combinations of mass and cost. Several are
better low-carbon steel. Two contours of Z* that just touch the trade-off
line are shown, one for * = 1, the other for * = 100 they are curved
because of the logarithmic axes.
The first, for * = 1 identifies higher strength steels as good choices.
This is because their higher strength allows a thinner tank wall. The
contour for * = 100 touches near CFRP, aluminum and magnesium
alloys if weight saving is very highly valued, these become attractive
solutions.
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Density
3
(kg/m )
7850
7850
1550
Yield strength
c (MPa)
314
775
760
Z* with * = 1
Z,
=1
2
1.03
5.2
*
Z,
= 100
101
45.6
13.4
*
Z* with * = 100
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Metal foams
C Ceramic
c foams
Figure E19
Polymer
foams
Function
Constraint
Objectives
Free variables
Choice of material
Figure E20
Answer. The steps in making a reasoned choice are as follows.
Ceramic foams are brittle. This probably rules them out for the truck
body because is exposed to impact loads. But in other applications
ceramic foams particularly glass foams are viable.
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1
Z = 1 + 2
E
Z is to be minimized, so 1 is a measure of the value
associated with reducing heat flow; 2 a measure of the value
associated with reducing core compliance. Rearranging the
equations gives
CCeramic
e foams
r
Metal foams
Penalty line
for 1/2 = 100
Polymer
foams
Penalty line
for 1/2 = 0.1
2 1
1 E
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(b) Make the same comparison for the shape factor B for
strength-limited design.
Answer.
(a) The shape-efficiency factor for elastic bending for the square
box section is
1h
Be =
= 16.7
2 t
That for the tube is
3 r
Be =
= 12.5
t
The box is more efficient than the tube of the same m/L, and both
are much stiffer in bending than a solid square section of the same
area (and thus mass per unit length).
(b) The shape-efficiency factor for bending failure for the square
box section is
h
Bf =
= 5.8
t
That for the tube is
3
r
= 4.33
Bf =
2 t
The box is more efficient than the tube, and both are roughly 5
times stronger in bending than a solid square section of the same
area (and thus mass per unit length).
Figure E21
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I =
(10t )3 .5t
12
(8t )3 .4t
12
= 246 t 4
(c) a box section of wall thickness t, and height and width h1 = 10t.
(c) The second moment of area, I, of the square box-section
(right-hand figure) about the axis shown as a dotted line is
h1 / 2
I =2
Answer.
(a) The shape factor for elastic bending of a tubular beam (lefthand figure) is defined by
12 I
Be =
A2
where I is the second moment of area and A is the area. The
second moment of area, I, of the tube about the axis shown as a
dotted line is
(5 t )4
1 4
h 1 h 42
12
h2 / 2
y 2 h2 dy
2 3
th
3 1
and
Figure E22
I =
y 2 h1 dy 2
(4 t )4
= 92.25 t 4
A = (5 t )2 (4 t )2 = 9 t 2
from which
Be =
12 I
A2
A = h12 h22 4 h1 t
Assembling these results, and inserting h1 = 10t gives
1 h1
Be =
=5
2 t
= 4.35
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f
B f
M =
from which
6Z
B =
A3 / 2
= 3.87
B =
from which
6Z
= 4.47
A3 / 2
2/3
factor B = 6 Z / A 3 / 2 gives
M =
Bf A 3 / 2
(3)
6
Substituting this into equation (1) for the mass gives
m = (6 M )2 / 3 L
2/3
f
B f
The best material-and-shape combination is that with the
greatest value of the index
M =
52
(4)
f 2 / 3
B f
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L5 / 2
1
/
2
e E
Be =
C m2 E
1
1/ 2
( )
(b) A steel truss bridge shown in Figure E23 has a span L and is simply
supported at both ends. It weighs m tonnes. As a rule of thumb,
bridges are designed with a stiffness SB such that the central deflection
of a span under its self-weight is less than 1/300 of the length L (thus
2
S B 300 mg / L where g is the acceleration due to gravity, 9.81 m/s ).
Use this information to calculate the minimum shape factor Be of the
three steel truss bridge spans listed in the table. Take the density of
3
steel to be 7900 kg/m and its modulus E to be 205 GPa. The constant
C1 = 384/5 = 76.8 for uniformly distributed load (UASSP, 3).
Span L
(m)
139
132
146
Mass m
(tonnes)
1060
650
850
Attribute
Beam stiffness SB
Mass/unit length
m/L
Beam length L
Beam material
Material density
Material modulus E
Figure E23
Value
5
7.2 x 10 N/m
1 kg/m
1m
6061 aluminum alloy
3
2670 kg/m
69 GPa
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Be = 18.6
(b) The shape factor is given in terms of m, L and SB by the
equation given in the question. Substituting S B 300 mg / L
gives
3600 L4 g 2
C1 m E
Inserting C1 = 384/5 (UASSP, 3) and the data from the table gives
the results shown below.
Be =
F = mg
6
(10 N)
Royal Albert bridge, Tamar,
Saltash UK (1857)
Carquinez Strait bridge,
California (1927)
A = m / L
2
Be
(m )
10.6
0.97
49.3
6.5
0.62
65.4
8.5
0.74
74.8
Function
Constraints
Objective
Free variables
Objective
Free variables
54
Cheap shaft
Specified failure torque T*
Length L specified
Minimum material cost C
Choice of material
Section shape and scale
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(3)
f A3 / 2
6 B
Substituting this into equation (1) for the mass of the beam gives
2
/
3
m = 6 M*
L
2/ 3
f
(4)
B f
M =
(7)
f A3 / 2
4.8 T
Substituting this into equation (5) for the material cost of the shaft
gives
2
/
3
C
m
m = 4 .8 T *
L
2/ 3
f
(8)
T f
T =
f 2 / 3
f
T
M4 =
Cm
f 2 / 3
B f
M3 =
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3.
Answer.
(a) The method is shown in the question. The results appear on
the chart on the following page. The CFRP beam with m/L of
about 4 kg/m is significantly (factor about 2) lighter than one made
of steel or softwood.
E * / * with E * = E / Be and
E* = E / Be
2
* = / Be
3
(N/m )
(kg/m )
9
10.5 x 10
9
7.0 x 10
9
4.5 x 10
395
160
260
E* / *
2 1/2
(N/m ) /(kg/m )
259
523
258
Figure E24
(b) Show, by direct calculation, that the conclusions of part (a) are
consistent with the idea that to minimize mass for a given stiffness
one should maximize
E * / * with E * = E / Be and * = / Be .
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Answer.
(a) The method is shown in the question. The results appear on
the chart on the next page. The steel section is the heaviest
( m / L 9 kg/m). The titanium alloy is the lightest ( m / L 2.5
kg/m).
f
(b) Direct calculation of B f
2/3
the table.
f
(iii) a titanium alloy with a shape factor B of 10, , strength f =
3
Material
Steel
6061 Al alloy
Ti alloy
Figure
(MPa)
(kg/m )
200
200
480
7900
2700
4420
f
The higher the value of B f
2/3
Bf
f
B f
2/3
10
3
10
2/3
/
3
(MPa) /(kg/m )
-2
2 x 10
-2
2.6 x 10
-2
6.4 x 10
f
B f
2/3
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60
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Be =
Material
Aluminum alloys
Steel
Copper alloys
Polycarbonate (PC)
Various woods
Wall thickness/tube
radius, t/r
0.07 to 0.25
0.045 to 0.1
0.075 to 0.1
0.15 to 0.3
Solid circular sections
only
12 I
Answer. The objective function is the mass. The mass m of the
tubular stalk is
A2
m = Ah
where is the density and A the section area of the tube. The
constraint is that the stalk should not buckle. The buckling load
for a slender column of height h is
Fcr =
Figure E26
Function
Constraints
Objective
Minimum mass m
Free variables
Choice of material
Section shape and scale
n2 2 E I
h2
e 2
n2 2 E B A
12
h2
(2)
m =
2 3 h2 1/2
F
e
(E B )1/2
(3)
The best choice of tubing for the stalk is that with the greatest
value of
M=
(1)
62
( E Be )1/2
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Ixx = r t
(4)
where r is the tube radius and t the wall thickness; the area A of the
section is 2 rt.
Be =
12 I
A2
3 r
(5)
E
(GPa)
(kg/m3)
Be
M
1/2
3
(GPa /Mg/m )
71
210
120
3
8-15
2700
7900
8900
1200
500 - 800
4 - 14
10 - 21
10 - 13
3.3 - 6.7
1
6.2 - 11.7
5.8 - 8.2
3.9 4.4
2.6 3.7
3.5 7.7
Aluminum offers the highest index and thus the lightest stalk.
Steel is the next best choice, then wood.
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t
=
= 1.8
2
s
r
6 tan( 60 ) r
If an initially solid, square section, beam of edge length bs is
formed into an array like that of the figure, with an outer, square,
profile, the edge-length of this new square is
1/ 2
b = s
bs
The apparent modulus of the tube array parallel to the axis of the
tubes is
E s
E =
s
and the second moment of area of the tube array is
2
b4
bs
I =
=
12
s
Thus the bending efficiency is
Figure E27
Be =
64
EI
r
= s = 0.56
Es I s
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E =
s
Es
and
f =
s
= s
t
h
3/ 2
f ,s
t
E = Es
h
3/ 2
f = f ,s
h
and
Be =
S
So
EI
Es I s
h
t
1
( / s )
Bf =
Figure E28
Z f
Z s f ,s
h
t
( / s )1 / 2
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Figure E29
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Answer. The adjacent figure shows the result. The guide lines have
been moved to pass through titanium, allowing the performance
of each composite system to be assessed. A vertical, broken,
line through each of the bound-envelopes marks the f = 0.5
point. The Ti-ZrC composite system offers little or no gain in
performance because the composite trajectory lies almost
parallel to the guide-lines. By contrast, Ti-Saffil composites offer
gains. Best of the lot is Ti-Nicalon. These composites have a
trajectory that lies almost normal to the guide-lines, offering the
greatest increase in all three criteria of excellence.
E10.2 Use the chart of Figure E29 to explore the relative potential of
Magnesium E-glass-fiber composites and Magnesium
Beryllium composites for light, stiff structures.
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~L =
Errf + Emm (1 f )
Erf + Em (1 f )
Thermal Conductivity
u = fr + (1 f )m
Figure E30
~
r + 2 m 2 f ( m r )
L = m
r + 2 m + f ( m r )
Subscript u: upper bound; subscript L: lower bound
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Panel
Core material
2.65 kg/m
Panel length, L
510 mm
Panel width, b
51 mm
Panel thickness, d
10.0 mm
Flexural stiffness EI
67 N.m
Failure moment M f
160 Nm
Panel
Answer.
m
(a) The equivalent density ~ is ~ = a = 265 kg / m 3
d
~ ~ 12 EI
The equivalent modulus E is E =
= 15.8 GPa
bd3
4M f
t
= 125 MPa
The equivalent strength f is ~ f =
bd2
(b) See opposite. Yes, the flexural properties of the panel lie in an
area of property space not occupied by monolithic materials.
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Answer. The comparisons are shown in two the figures on the next
page.
(a) The comparison for stiffness, using the criterion of
excellence, E 1 / 2 / , is highlighted. The nearer a material lies
to this line, the better is its performance. Natural materials are
extraordinarily efficient by this measure. CFRP is comparable
with the best of them, but the other man-made materials
compare poorly with those of nature.
Material
Youngs modulus
E (GPa)
Density
3
(kg/m )
Strength,
f (MPa)
Aluminum alloy
74
2700
335
Steel
210
7850
700
CFRP
100
1550
760
GFRP
21
1850
182
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Steel
CFRP
CFRP
Steel
Al-alloy
Al-alloy
GFRP
GFRP
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For this project use the CES EduPack Level 3 Database, and under
subset select All materials (instead of All bulk materials). Then
create a custom subset which includes natural materials (under
Hybrids), natural fibers and particulates, and the materials featured in
the question.
Spring steel
Cu 2% Be
The table lists the moduli and strengths of spring materials. Plot these
onto a copy of the E f chart for the materials in the custom subset
you created above, and compare their energy-storing performance with
that of natural materials, using the 2f / E as the criterion of choice.
Here f is the failure stress, E is Youngs modulus and is the
density.
Material
Modulus
(GPa)
Strength
(MPa)
Density
3
(kg/m )
Spring steel
206
1100
7850
Copper-2%Beryllium
130
980
8250
68
760
1580
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Cortical
bone (L)
E10.8
Creativity: what could you do with X? The CES EduPack
can produce a wide variety of materials property charts. These
can be used as the starting point for what ifO? exercises. As a
challenge, use any chart or combination of charts to explore
what might be possible by hybridizing any pair of the materials
listed below, in any configuration you care to choose.
(a) Cement
(b) Wood
(c) Polypropylene
(d) Steel
(e) Copper.
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Shape
elevator
section
(from an
Table
9.3)quadrant
is
Function
square box
Constraints
Material
1 hclass: aluminum or magnesium alloy
e
= 163D-solid
.7
Shape
B = 2 class:
t
Mass: 5 kg
That for the tube
is Minimum section: 5 mm
e = 3 r =0.5
Tolerance:
12.mm,
5 (0.05mm on bearing
B
surfaces) t
Surface than
roughness:
10 m
(1 m
on bearing
The box is more efficient
the tube
of the
same
m/L, and
surfaces)
both are much stiffer in bending than a solid square section of
Choice of process
only
machining
from
solid
achieves
them.
The
stronger in bending than a solid square section of the same area
(and thus
answer
herelength).
is not to reject the others, but to add a finishing
mass
per unit
step, shown at the bottom of Mass range and Tolerance charts.
The result is the list shown in the third column. Economics are
important here the Economic batch-size chart suggests that
only the three listed in the last column are economic at a batch
size of 100 200.
The conclusion: explore investment casting (with additional
machining steps) and numerically controlled machining from
solid.
Figure E31
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Processes
passing the
material
constraint.
Sand casting
Die casting
Processes that
survive the
shape
constraint
Sand casting
Die casting
Investment
casting
Investment
casting
Low pressure
casting
Low pressure
casting
Forging
Forging
Extrusion
Sheet forming
Powder
methods
Machine from
solid
FAILS
FAILS
Powder
methods
Machine from
solid
Processes
meeting the
tolerance
constraint
FAILS
Die casting plus
machining
Investment
casting plus
machining
Low pressure
casting plus
machining
Forging plus
machining
Powder
methods
Machine from
solid
Processes that
are economic
at a batch of
100 - 200
FAILS
Investment
casting plus
machining
FAILS
FAILS
E11.2 Casing for an electric plug (Figure E32). The electric plug
is perhaps the commonest of electrical products. It has a
number of components, each performing one or more
functions. The most obvious are the casing and the pins,
though there are many more (connectors, a cable clamp,
fasteners, and, in some plugs, a fuse). The task is to
investigate processes for shaping the two-part insulating
casing, the thinnest part of which is 2 mm thick. Each part
weighs about 30 grams and is to be made in a single step from
a thermoplastic or thermosetting polymer with a planned batch
4
6
size of 5 x 10 2 x 10 . The required tolerance of 0.3 mm
and surface roughness of 1 m must be achieved without
using secondary operations.
(a) Itemize the function and constraints, leave the objective
blank and enter Choice of process for the free variable.
FAILS
Machine from
solid
Figure E32
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Objective
Free variables
Mass: 0.03 kg
Minimum section: 2 mm
Tolerance: 0.3 mm
Surface roughness: 1m
4
6
Comment
The selection is identical with that derived
from the charts, but the software also
delivers data files containing supporting
information for each process.
E11.3 Ceramic valves for taps (Figure E33). Few things are more
irritating than a dripping tap. Taps drip because the rubber
washer is worn or the brass seat is pitted by corrosion, or both.
Ceramics have good wear resistance, and they have excellent
corrosion resistance in both pure and salt water. Many
household taps now use ceramic valves.
The sketch shows how they work. A ceramic valve consists of
two disks mounted one above the other, spring-loaded so that
their faces are in contact. Each disk has a diameter of 20 mm, a
thickness of 3 mm and weighs about 10 grams. In order to seal
well, the mating surfaces of the two disks must be flat and
smooth, requiring high levels of precision and surface finish;
typically tolerance < 0.02 mm and surface roughness < 0.1 m.
The outer face of each has a slot that registers it, and allows the
o
upper disc to be rotated through 90 (1/4 turn). In the off
position the holes in the upper disc are blanked off by the solid
part of the lower one; in the on position the holes are aligned. A
5
6
production run of 10 10 is envisaged.
(a) List the function and constraints, leave the objective blank
and enter Choice of process for the free variable.
(b) Use the CES EduPack to identify possible
processes to make the casing.
Figure E33
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Objective
Free variables
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Figure E34
(a) List the function and
constraints, leave the
objective blank and enter Choice of process for the free variable.
Objective
Free variables
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Constraints
Objective
Free variables
Choice of process
Figure E35
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Function
Constraints
Objective
Free variables
Section thickness: 8 mm
Permanent
Watertight
-
Choice of process
Function
Constraints
Objective
Free variables
Comment
Comment
Section thickness: 4 mm
Demountable
Watertight
-
Choice of process
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Function
Constraints
Objective
Free variables
Function
Constraints
Objective
Free variables
Comment
82
Comment
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Material
Cast iron
Polypropylene
Embodied energy*
MJ/kg
CO2*
kg/kg
Embodied energy
MJ/chair
CO2
kg/chair
17.3
1.02
147
8.7
95
2.7
152
4.3
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Embodied energy/m ,
H p , MJ/m3
ABS
1 x 105
GFRP
2.4x 105
Aluminum
5.5x 105
and forks are ordered by an environmentally-conscious pizzahouse. The shape of each (and thus the length, width and profile)
are fixed, but the thickness is free: it is chosen to give enough
bending-stiffness to cut and impale the pizza without excessive
flexure. The pizzeria-proprietor wishes to enhance the greenness
of his image by minimizing the energy-content of his throw-away
tableware, which could be molded from polystyrene (PS) or
stamped from aluminum sheet.
Function
Constraints
Objective
Free variables
Figure E37
M.F. Ashby 2010
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M1 =
E1/ 2
H p
and
M2 =
y2 / 3
H p
E12.5. Show that the index for selecting materials for a strong panel
with the dimensions shown in Figure E.38, loaded in bending, with
minimum embodied energy content is that with the largest value of
Answer. The objective function for the energy of the panel, H , is the
volume Lbh times the embodied energy of the material per unit volume,
Hp :
H
I =
1y / 2
H p
b h3
12
We can reduce the energy H by reducing h , but only so far that the
stiffness constraint is still met. Combining the last two equations and
solving for h gives
12 F * L
h
C2b y
F = C2
= bhL H p
> F*
1. / 2
b h3
I =
12 .
12 F * L3 b
C2
1/ 2
Hp
1y / 2
Mp =
Hp
1y / 2
Figure E38
M.F. Ashby 2010
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M =
y2 / 3
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(a) Start with stiffness. Derive the material index for stiffnesslimited, shaped beams of minimum mass. Adapt this to make
the index for stiffness-limited, shaped beams of embodied
energy by multiplying density by embodied energy /kg, H p .
M1 =
Material
(b) Repeat the procedure, this time for strength, creating the
appropriate index for strength-limited shaped beams at
minimum energy content by adapting equation 9.28.
Modulus
E GPa
Strength
f MPa
Energy Hp
MJ/kg
Be
Soft wood
Reinforced
concrete
Steel
700
10
40
7.5
1.4
2900
35
10
1.4
7900
210
200
30
15
10
35
210
H p
3
(GJ/m )
5.25
14.5
238
Be
M1
1/2
3
(GPa /GJ/m )
2
2
15
0.86
0.57
0.23
f
B f
M2 =
H p
2/ 3
Material
Wood
Concrete
Steel
E
(GPa)
Wood
Concrete
Steel
Density
kg/m3
H p
per unit weight, and Be is the shape factor for stiffness controlled
design. The first Table shows values of M1 for the wood, the
concrete and the shaped steel beam. Wood wins.
Material
( Be E)1/2
87
f
(MPa)
40
10
200
H p
3
(GJ/m )
5.25
14.5
238
Be
M2
2/3
3
(MPa /GJ/m )
1.4
1.4
4
2.8
0.4
0.36
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Author
Reproduction
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Accuracy
M. F. Ashby, 2010
Grantas Teaching Resources website aims to support teaching of materials-related courses in Engineering, Science and Design.
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This resource is part of a set of resources created by Professor Mike Ashby to help introduce materials and materials selection to students.
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