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Topic 4: Materials Part III METALS
Metals • Metals are often described as positively charged nuclei in a sea of electrons. The outer electrons of the metal atom nuclei are free and can flow through the crystalline structure. The bonding is caused by attraction between the positively charged metallic atom nuclei and the negatively charged cloud of free electrons.
Introduction • Metals exist as crystals • Crystals are regular arrangements of particles (atoms, ions or molecules). • Not entirely uniform – made of crystal “grains.”
Heat Treatment • Reheating a solid metal or alloy allows material to diffuse between neighbouring grains and the grain structure to change. Slow cooling allows larger grains to form; rapid cooling produces smaller grains.
Heat Treatment • Heating a metal tends to shake the atoms into a more regular arrangement - decreasing the number of grain boundaries, and so making the metal softer. Banging the metal around when it is cold tends to produce lots of small grains. Cold working therefore makes a metal harder. To restore its workability, you would need to reheat it.
Alloys • You can also break up the regular arrangement of the atoms by inserting atoms of a slightly different size into the structure. Alloys such as brass (a mixture of copper and zinc) are harder than the original metals because the irregularity in the structure helps to stop rows of atoms from slipping over each other.
Superalloys • The strength of most metals decreases as the temperature is increased. Superalloys are metallic alloys that can be used at high temperatures, often in excess of 0.7 of their absolute melting temperature. • The predominant alloying ingredient is typically the transition metal nickel. Other ingredients are added to nickel in each of the subcategories of this trademark designation and include varying percentages of the nickel, molybdenum, chromium, cobalt, iron, copper, manganese, titanium, zirconium, aluminum, carbon, and tungsten.