ema3010+materials+s11+syllabus

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  • 8/7/2019 EMA3010+Materials+S11+Syllabus

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    Standardized Syllabus for the College of Engineering

    EMA 3010 Materials Spring 2011Section 2963

    1. Course Description: Conceptual perspective for origin of materials behavior, including structure,property, performance interrelationships. Materials selection and use of familiar materials, includingmetals, ceramics, polymers, electronic materials, and composites in electronics, structural and otherengineering applications. (3 Credit Hours)

    2. Course Objectives: To present the fundamental concepts in materials science and engineering. Todescribe the structure, properties, and applications of metallic, ceramic, polymeric and compositematerials. To generalize structure-property-performance interrelationships in materials.

    3. Prerequisites: CHM 2045 General Chemistry

    4. Contribution of course to meeting the professional component: This course provides 3 credits towardsengineering sciences.

    5. Instructor: Dr. Juan C. Nino a. Office location: 172 Rhines Hall b. Telephone: (352) 846 3787 c. E-mail address: [email protected] d. Office hours: T & W 1:30-3:30 pm (or any day by appointment).

    6. Teaching Assistant: Charles Fisher a. Office location: B09 Rhines Hall b. Telephone: (352) 846-3352 c. E-mail address: [email protected] d. Office hours: M & W 3:00-5:00 pm

    7. Meeting Times and Location: T Periods 2 & 3, 8:30 10:10 am (no break) CLB C130 R Period 3, 9:35 10:25 pm CLB C130

    8. Textbook Requireda. Title: Fundamentals of Materials Science and Engineering: An

    Integrated Approach b. Author: William D. Callister, Jr. and D.G. Rethwisch c. Year and edition: 2008 Third Edition (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.) d. ISBN: 978-0-470-12537-3

    9. On the Web: This course will use Sakai extensively as a communication and archival tool. Thestudents can access all relevant course information (course notes, homework and exam solutions,announcements, grades, etc.) via the Sakai entry link: https://lss.at.ufl.edu/ .

    10. Conduct, Attendance and Expectations: Proper behavior in class is always important and leads to a

    relaxed and productive educational environment. Thus, eating , drinking , texting , reading ofnewspapers, working on homework for this or other courses, or other activities that are not partof the class are not allowed. Students who do not comply with these requirements or whobehave disorderly or disrespectfully may be asked to leave the classroom. Leaving your cellphone on , leaving early or arriving late can be VERY distracting. All electronic devices (PDAs,cell-phones, etc.) should be turned off or in silent mode . If your cell phone rings during class it willbe confiscated for the remainder of the class period. While not directly enforced, attendance is strongly suggested since significant amount of participative as well as individual and collaborative work will beperformed during the class sessions and will be worth as much as 25% of the course points.

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    Syllabus for EMA 3010 Materials Dr. Juan C. Nino Spring 2010 Page 2 of 4

    11. Grading and Grading Scale: The course grade will be based on a point system as follows: Activity Number Points per Activity Total Points

    In Class 2 Period Exams 3 100 300Individual Homework* 9 10 90In Class Group Problems* 9 5 45Pull-up Quizzes** 9 5 45Movies 5 5 25Exam Feedback 2 5 10Course Review 1 10 10

    Course Total 525

    Exams will be closed book and in class as scheduled below. Students are allowed to bring one letter-sized paper (8x11) with equations, annotations and/or any relevant information written in pen orprinted ( NO PENCIL ) on both sides (if needed). There will be no final exam . Requests for re-gradingmust be made in writing and within one week after an assignment has been returned. There will be nomake-up exams given the extra credit scheme (below) and advanced exam scheduling. Exceptions willbe made only due to verified personal emergency supported by written documentation.

    Homework problems are assigned on a weekly basis on Tuesdays (as shown below) with the exercisesposted on Sakai. Homework is to be submitted online and will be due by the beginning of thefollowing Tuesday class (except HW3 and HW6, due Thursday two days after posted). No latehomework will be accepted . Group discussions towards homework solving and teamwork areencouraged but all answers that are turned in should be the result of your own work. In addition, youshould keep records of the work leading to your answers throughout the semester , as they will berandomly requested for grading clarification.

    Group Problems will be in class. Typically a group of 3 students will work on the problems for 10minutes and should be turned in a single page with the solution and names of the people in the group.They will be worth 5 points and will be graded correct (5 points) or incorrect/incomplete (2 points).

    Pull-up Quizzes will be on Thursdays during the first five minutes of class and will consist of twoquestions. One (attendance) will be a social/polling question worth 2 points and the second one (MSE)will be a simple question on the material covered or assigned the previous session, worth 3 points.Students not attending an activity will receive a score of zero points in that activity .

    Grading will be assigned based on the total course points earned as follows:

    Points (at least) Grade % of 500 Points % of 525 Points460 A 92 87.62440 A- 88 83.81420 B+ 84 80.00400 B 80 76.19380 B- 76 72.38360 C+ 72 68.57340 C 68 64.76325 C- 65 61.90310 D+ 62 59.05295 D 59 56.19280 D- 56 53.33

    below 280 E

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    Syllabus for EMA 3010 Materials Dr. Juan C. Nino Spring 2010 Page 3 of 4

    12. Course Outline: Below is the tentative schedule of topics, activities, reading assignments, exams, andhomework.

    S Date Topic Reading Assignments Activity Points Homework

    Jan1 6 Introduction + Atomic Structure and Chemical Bonding Chapters 1 and 2

    11 Movies "Paving the Way" + "State of Resolve" (Beverly) M1 2 102 13 Crystalline Structure of Materials (Metals) 3.1 3.5,3.10 3.21 Q1 5 HW1 Posted3 18 Crystalline Structure of Materials (Ceramics) 3.6 3.9 GP1 5 HW1 Due4 18 Structure of Polymers + Composite Arrangements Chapter 4 + 15.1 HW2 Posted

    20 Movie "The Price of Traffic" (Beverly) M3 55 25 Imperfections in Matierals (Metals) 5.1 5.2, 5.6 5.13 GP2 5 HW2 Due6 25 Defects in Ceramics + Polymers 5.3 5.5 HW3 Posted7 27 Review Session Q2 5 HW3

    Due

    Feb1 EXAM 1 (In class) E1 1001 EXAM 1 (In class) E1

    8 3 Post Exam Review + Feedback FB 5

    9 8 Diffusion Chapter 6 GP3 5 HW4 Posted10 8 Mechanical Properties (Elastic) 7.1 7.1511 10 Mechanical Properties (Plastic) 8.1 8.7 Q3 512 15 Strengthening Mechanisms in Pure Materials 8.9 8.14,8.17 8.18 GP4 5 HW4 Due13 15 Phase Diagrams (Rules) 10.1 10.15 HW5 Posted14 17 Phase Diagrams (Metals + Ceramics) 10.16, 10.18 10.20 Q4 515 22 Phase Transformations and Forming (Metals) 11.1 11.6, 14.2 14.6 GP5 5 HW5 Due16 22 Ceramic Processing 14.7 14.10 HW6 Posted17 24 Polymer Processing 14.11 14.15 Q5 5 HW6

    Due

    Mar1 EXAM 2 (In class) E2 1001 EXAM 2 (In class) E2

    18 3 Post Exam Review + Feedback FB 5Spring Break

    19 15 Mechanical Properties (Fracture + Fatigue) 9.2 9.13 GP6 520 15 Environmental and Thermal Effects (Creep) 9.14 9.16 HW7 Posted21 17 Mechanical Properties of Composites 15.2 15.3 Q6 522 22 Corrosion 16.7 16.9, 16.11 16.13 GP7 5 HW7 Due23 22 Electrical Properties 12.1 12.11 HW8 Posted24 24 Electrical Properties 12.16 12.25 Q7 525 29 Thermal Properties Chapter 17 GP8 5 HW8 Due26 29 Magnetic Properties Chapter 1827 31 Optical Properties Chapter 19 Q8 5 HW9 Posted

    Apr

    5 Movie "Making Stuff" M4 5 10 HW9 Due28 7 Review Session Q9 5

    12 EXAM 3 (In Class) E3 10012 EXAM 3 (In Class) E3

    29 14 Pos t Exam Review30 19 New and Upcoming Materials + Dream Quiz GP9 531 19 Course Review + Evaluation CR 10

    NO FINAL

    EXAM TOTAL 435 90

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    Syllabus for EMA 3010 Materials Dr. Juan C. Nino Spring 2010 Page 4 of 4

    13. Class Sessions: The class sessions will have the following tentative timing and sequence:

    Thursday Sessions Tuesday SessionsTime (min) Activity Time (min) Activity0-5 Quiz 0-5 Q&A5-10 Video 5-10 Video11-35 Key Topics (Mini-lecture) 11-35 Key Topics (Mini-lecture)36-38 Stretch + N.-S. + O.I. 36-38 Stretch + N.-S. +I.Q.P.39-45 Worked Examples 39-45 Worked Examples46-50 Q & A 46-48 Stretch + O.I.

    49-74 Key Topics (Mini-lecture)75-85 Worked Examples86-95 Group Problems96-100 Q & A

    14. Honesty Policy All students admitted to the University of Florida have signed a statement of academichonesty committing them to be honest in all academic work and understanding that failure to complywith this commitment will result in disciplinary action. This statement is a reminder to uphold yourobligation as a UF student and to be honest in all work submitted and exams taken in this course and allothers.

    15. Accommodation for Students with Disabilities Students Requesting classroom accommodation mustfirst register with the Dean of Students Office. That office will provide the student with documentationthat he/she must provide to the course instructor when requesting accommodation.

    16. UF Counseling Services Resources are available on-campus for students having personal problemsor lacking clear career and academic goals. The resources include:

    University Counseling Center, 301 Peabody Hall, 392-1575, Personal and Career Counseling.SHCC mental Health, Student Health Care Center, 392-1171, Personal and Counseling Center for Sexual

    Assault/Abuse Recovery and Education (CARE), Student Health Care Center, 392-1161, sexual assaultcounseling.

    Career Resource Center, Reitz Union, 392-1601, career development assistance and counseling.

    17. Software Use All faculty, staff and student of the University are required and expected to obey thelaws and legal agreements governing software use. Failure to do so can lead to monetary damagesand/or criminal penalties for the individual violator. Because such violations are also against Universitypolicies and rules, disciplinary action will be taken as appropriate. We, the members of the University ofFlorida community, pledge to uphold ourselves and our peers to the highest standards of honesty andintegrity.

    *Each question in the homework will be graded automatically by Sakai under the Test & Quizzes tool, on anall or nothing value scheme; you will have thirty minutes total to upload the answers in at most 2 tries.The availability of the assessment tool for submitting answers on Sakai will end at 7:00 AM on the day thehomework is due. This does not apply to HW0 .