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Curricula in Materials and Chemical Sciences TEQIP IIT-KANPUR Feb 2014
Vikram JayaramMaterials Engineering
IISc
Imperatives in a materials education
ENGINEERING
SCIENCE
PHYSICS CHEMISTRY BIOLOGY EARTH SCIENCE
MECHANICAL ELECTRICAL CHEMICAL
CIVIL MEDICINE AEROSPACE
Subject range wide (metals, ceramics, polymers, semiconductors)Must convey lots of raw information (properties of materials)Attention spans are lower (need to make it interesting)Other engineering skills needed (for most employers)
Therefore we must:teach less in each subjectunify conceptsbring in practical situations from day 1
Polymers probably require a separate approach. Attempts to over-unify have not been too successful elsewhere. But inorganic materials need commonality of approach
Who are our potential employers??
Primary metal makers, mineral explorationNot heavy employers, limited attraction for students
Polymers and plasticsNot the strengths of our curriculum
Electronic materials / Thin filmsNot there in India except isolated cases in modeling
With the exception of one or two multinationals, materials graduates employability demands collateral engineering skills broad education, logical thinking, mathematical skills, design. This carries over to masters as well.
What is the core unique to Materials?
• A historical perspective on materials usage and development
• Generalised solution thermodynamics and phase transformations
• Defects and their influence on properties
These must be taught rigorously!
Where did Materials Science & Engineering come from?
Mud
Wood
Cement / Stone
Pottery & Ceramic
THE ANCIENT
WORLD
Glass Textiles
Blacksmithery and iron
The Modern world of Materials
It’s all the same today, except for….
Glass fibre
RayonAluminium
Ceramic spark plug
Composite
???????
Some illustrations from thermodynamicsInterplay of Entropy and Enthalpy in phase equilibria
Entropy drives mixing makes purity expensiveElectricity transmission not possible before OFHC copperFive 9s Al is more expensive than goldGa for GaAs, GaN, etc. must be 8 9s pure (99.999999) Fe removal from clay to avoid brown spots in sanitary wareSeparating rare-earths! The Chinese problem!Entropy drives mixing dictates ion dissolution from solid into liquid and from liquid to liquidelectrical double layer theory mineral processingstability of emulsions / suspensions in ceramics / paint making nanoparticles and bottom-up nanoassemblyOsmosis / dialysis
Some illustrations from thermodynamicsInterplay of Entropy and Enthalpy in phase equilibria
Not just phase equilibria in solidsFractional distillation / crystallisation, steam distillationZone refiningOil-water mixing and detergentsSeparation of fat from milk during denaturingEnclosed miscibility gapsConstant temperature bathsGetting water from icebergs
Free Energy & Chemical Potential
Energy and its conversionchemistry to heat to work OR electrochemistry directly to work Photons to workLow grade heat and high grade heat, no free lunchThe origin of dissipationThe free energy change when an atom is added•Darken experiment; Si and C like each other (think of SiC!)•Selective dissolution of Ag from a Au-Ag alloy•Maximum voltage for anodising before water starts splitting•Stability of electrodes or electrolytes when the EMFs for dissociation are approached
Conjugate variablesInter-relate traditionally distinct areas
Cracks can propagate at constant load / displacement. The stability of mechanical systems internal energy change at constant volume (no work done) or at constant pressure (PV work done)
OC voltage and SC current in fuel / solar cellsElectrical analogues of the constrained stress or unconstrained strain developed in a particle undergoing a phase transformation
Actuation from electro / magneto striction or SMAmaximum work extractable is always less than the ideal finite current (displacement) resistances (dissipation)
A high EMF is like a tall dam. High current is like a broad shallow barrage. Solar cells are like barrages and need electrical stepping up. Windmills need mechanical stepping up (gears). It is more convenient to spin a small turbine at high speed than a huge turbine slowly. But that’s why small is not beautiful.
Bonding and Structure
Defer crystallography until bonding / packing are explained
• Use the interatomic U-r curve as much as possible• Metals from packing considerations (including interstitials)• Ionic crystals and Madelung constants can be taught without
Miller indices• Solutions Hume Rothery, link to property changes (band
gap changes with electronegativity difference in II-VI and III-V, not just Vegard)
• Solutions and constitutional defects (compensating ions)• Clearly distinguish compositions and phases; magnetite to γ-Fe2O3 is an example of miscibility with the solute being electrons and oxygen vacancies
Transport & Transformations
• Must we split transport into heat / mass transfer & solid state diffusion?
• All transformations (solid-solid, vapour-solid, solid-liquid)• Examples from ceramics as well as metals: zirconia,
ferroelectrics), shape memory alloys• Inter-relate driving forces and nucleation from different areas
e.g., precipitation in aqueous solutions uses chemical potentials of reactants to control G (not temperature), e.g., aragonite platelets in shells, apatite in bones
• e.g., nucleation of reverse domains analagous to overcoming a barrier with magnetostatic driving force
• Commonplace examples like ice-cream and cloud formation
Mechanical properties
Less obsession with crystallographic slip! Begin with ideas of work, force, stiffness, viscosity and displacement
do not start with deformation of metals at low homologous temp. Start with generalised Voigt / Maxwell models, Standard linear solids
Do anelasticty, creep without distinguishing between material classes
Teach as much as possible with scalar quantities before getting into tensors.
Mechanical properties need to be taught extensively in a phenomenological way before bringing in crystallography, texture and crystal plasticity
Dynamic effects (response to cyclic impulses)
• anelastic response in general (Zener), the concept of resonance and a time scale of response matching the (inverse) frequency of excitation
• relaxation in polymers and glasses, Snoek, PLC• impedance curves (electrochemistry) and different
mechanisms of polarisation• atomic force microscopy in the dynamic mode (this is not
formidable; any BSc Physics student or mechanical engineering student has the math to handle it)
• Superparamagnetism and blocking temperature, the life of information in the hard disc are all related to switching times for domains. Once basic magnetism is taught, even NMR can be explained
Electronic structure and propertiesIn 2014, if your students do not know the definition of a
metal and why metals conduct electricity, they have no right to be called metallurgists or materials scientists! They will also not understand solar cells, GMR read heads, thermoelectrics, oxide sensors, infra red detectors, lasers, exchange spring magnets and the whole of the semiconductor industry
Bite the bullet! Physicists will not do the whole job for you!• Build on basic quantum mechanics (a first course that
goes up to the harmonic operator and hydrogen atom is essential, so too the principles of the chemical bond)
• Introduce energy bands with minimal math., make all the important concepts plausible and then get on with it. Leave the rigour to the condensed matter physicists
Electronic materials and links with classical theories
• Holes are conceptually easier for those who have been exposed to vacancies
• Defect equilibria for charged species are easily linked to reaction rate theory
• Fermi level equalisation, junctions <->chemical potential Choice of Ohmic and Schottky contacts
• Choosing electrodes and electrolytes, e.g., oxide for photocatalysis should not dissociate before water splits
• Corrosion is simply the reverse of all this
Materials Processing
• Primary material extraction from ores (strengthen links with surface chemistry, colloids, wetting, chemo-mechanical effects)
• Unification of processes involving mass transfer(primary metal production (thermal as well as electrical) CVD, crystal growth and solidification)
• Solid state processes (sintering, metal working)
Concepts followed by selective detail.If you must teach entire courses on one single element,
make it an elective.
Materials Design and Selection
• Design: alloying additions, thermomechanical treatment, composites, multilayer architectures
• Link to component design and manufacturability• Selection: criteria for property optimisation (Ashby
maps)• Vast field: Not ideal for teaching, Select a few
examples from different material and application classes, make students deliver a term paper
Modeling and numerical analysis
Do we need it? Most certainlyDo not begin with methods. Start with operations
research type exercises in how to frame a problem, first conceptually and then mathematically
What sort of modeling methods do we need to teach?Who should teach it?How do we connect with the rest of the syllabus?Most importantly: who will teach mathematics in a useful
way to materials people???
Characterisation
• Structural characterisation, thermal analysis combine theory with extensive hands-on exposure
• Avoid obsession with diffraction spectroscopy and scanning probe methods needed in a first course
• Electrical characterisation handling equipment as well as examining material properties
What do we need from others?
• Mathematics (on-going debate! Taught by friendly engineers? Physicists? Mathematicians?)
• Physical Chemistry, solution thermodynamics, orbitals, chemical bonds and some solid state chemistry
• Basic quantum mechanics• Electrical systems, basic electronics• Solid mechanics, fluid mechanics• Manufacturing
Length scales, Dimensional Analysis and backs of envelopes
The interplay between competing energies leading to a critical length scale
• domain widths in ferromagnetism, critical nuclei and crack lengths, dislocation core width, twins in a displacive transformation, coercivity maxima in nanoparticles
• when do length scale effects really start to play a role, i.e., when is “nano” really the harbinger of something new as opposed to something just small?
Error analysis, behaviour of functions, dimensional analysis with practical examples (soft course, but must be practical; perhaps over a summer)
Modifications to teaching
• Avoid ppts (always crammed with info and go too fast)
• Frequent tests (allows for early detection of problem cases); make them open book except at the end
• Make assignments (and exams) more thinking-based
• Encourage situations wherein students ask questions when they do not understand:
the lever rulewhy is there an Mf and an Ms?
Laboratory practice and projects
• Thorny implementation issue! Staff intensive!• Need creative experiments (better to design a
fluidised bed with ping-pong balls to illustrate principles than make students draw blast furnaces)
• Examining how components are made• Do not abolish projects for heaven’s sake!
Needs faculty discussion, PhD student involvement
At the end of the dayWhat are we trying to fix?• Increase high quality intake into materials• Materials graduates do not interact well with other
engineering disciplines; even when they become professors
• Rigid (inflexible) faculty recruitment strategies• Clarity on the employment we are preparing them for
Finally: We rely on others (physicists, chemists, engineers) to provide the background we need; this requires negotiation!
The idea of an activated state
Thermal Activation: the notion of thermal excitations promoting the formation of an activated state is all-pervasive. Reaction rate theory fundamentals need to be strengthened