ACTIVITIES | PERCENTAGEs |
---|---|
Problem Sets | 16% |
Test 1 | 22% |
Test 2 | 22% |
Final Exam | 40% |
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The goal of 3.044 is to teach cost-effective and sustainable production of solid material with a desired geometry, structure or distribution of structures, and production volume. Toward this end, it is organized around different types of phase transformations which determine the structure in various processes for making materials, in roughly increasing order of entropy change during those transformations.
This section will take advantage of the mathematical similarity between diffusion and heat conduction to introduce you to the phenomenon of heat transfer by conduction, convection and radiation. These tools will provide understanding on how to induce or avoid the various chemical reactions, precipitation, annealing and other solid-state phase transformations learned in 3.022.
Most large-scale processes for making solids involve the liquid state at some point, and the initial microstructure formed during the liquid-solid transition often persists into the final part. This section will deal with solidification and precipitation/coating reactions from solution, with a focus on the mechanisms which determine structure in this processing step.
Fluid behavior and fluid-solid interactions are crucial to understanding many processes. This section will focus on concepts of drag force on solids and fluids in relative motion, from particles to flat surfaces to porous media. It will close with a discussion of overall mass and momentum balances on large control volumes.
This section will introduce mechanical deformation processes from sheet forming to sintering, which provide opportunities for inexpensively forming very advantageous structures on a large scale. It will build on concepts from the previous section to treat deforming solids as moving fluids, and also deformation mechanisms discussed in 3.032.
As the transformation with the largest entropy change, vapor-solid processes present unique opportunities for precise control of structure.
3.044 will close with a set of lectures summarizing and contextualizing course material and placing it in the context of society at large.
3.012, 3.022
There is no required text for 3.044. The topics and order of coverage are such that we will use excerpts from the following textbooks:
Ashby, M. F. Materials Selection in Mechanical Design. 3rd ed. Boston, MA: Elsevier Butterworth-Heinemann, 2005. ISBN: 9780750661683.
Bird, R. B., W. E. Stewart, and E. N. Lightfoot. Transport Phenomenon. New York, NY: J. Wiley and Sons, 2001. ISBN: 9780471410775.
Flemings, M. Solidification Processing. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 1974. ISBN: 9780070212831.
Incropera, F. P., and D. P. DeWitt. Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer. 5th ed. New York, NY: J. Wiley and Sons, 2001. ISBN: 9780471386506.
Poirier, D. R., and G. H. Geiger. Transport Phenomena in Materials Processing. Warrendale, PA: Minerals, Metals & Materials Society, 1998. ISBN: 9780873392723.
There will be two tests and a final exam. Grades will be determined from exams and eight homework assignments as follows:
ACTIVITIES | PERCENTAGEs |
---|---|
Problem Sets | 16% |
Test 1 | 22% |
Test 2 | 22% |
Final Exam | 40% |