Metallurgy Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Metallurgy – the science + technology of metals: how metallic elements, intermetallics, and alloys behave chemically & physically, and how we shape them into useful parts.
Metallurgist – a specialist who applies physics, chemistry, and engineering to extract, process, and design metal components.
Subdisciplines
Chemical metallurgy: reduction/oxidation reactions, extraction, thermodynamics, electrochemistry, corrosion.
Physical metallurgy: crystal structures, phase transformations, mechanical behavior, failure mechanisms.
Ferrous vs. Non‑Ferrous – iron‑based (steel, cast iron) vs. all other metals (Al, Cu, Ti, Ni alloys). Ferrous metals ≈ 95 % of world production.
Key Alloy Families
Iron‑Carbon: plain carbon steel, cast iron, Hadfield (Mn‑Cr) steel.
Stainless: austenitic grades → high corrosion resistance.
Lightweight: Al‑Cu, Mg alloys – automotive/aerospace.
Superalloys: Ni‑based (Inconel) – retain strength at > 800 °C.
Metalworking Categories – casting, forging, rolling, extrusion, machining, sintering, additive manufacturing, cold‑working.
Heat‑Treatment Basics – anneal (soften), quench (hard martensite), temper (reduce brittleness).
Surface Modification – electroplating, electroless deposition, shot peening, thermal spraying.
Characterization – metallography, X‑ray/electron diffraction, SEM, TEM, EBSD, atom‑probe tomography.
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📌 Must Remember
Ferrous dominance: 95 % of global metal output is iron‑based.
Iron‑Carbon system: carbon is the only intentional alloying element in plain carbon steels; > 2 % C → cast iron.
Quench‑tempering cycle: rapid cooling → hard martensite → reheating (tempering) → tougher, slightly softer metal.
Shot peening effect: introduces compressive surface stresses → improves fatigue & stress‑corrosion resistance.
Electroplating vs. Electroless – electroplating needs an external current; electroless works on non‑conductors via chemical reduction.
Casting variants: sand (low cost, rough), investment (high accuracy, complex), die (high volume, thin walls), centrifugal (high‑density parts).
Superalloys: Ni‑based alloys maintain strength at > 800 °C; used in turbines & pressure vessels.
Surface‑engineered coatings: thermal spray > electroplating for high‑temperature service.
Characterization hierarchy: metallography (macro/microstructure) → diffraction (phase ID) → SEM/TEM (morphology & composition) → EBSD/APT (crystallography & atomic composition).
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🔄 Key Processes
Extractive Metallurgy (Metal from Ore)
Physical reduction: crush → concentrate → melt.
Chemical reduction: add carbon or CO to metal oxides (e.g., Fe₂O₃ + 3 CO → 2 Fe + 3 CO₂).
Electrolytic reduction: pass current through molten/aqueous salts (e.g., Al³⁺ → Al).
Leaching: dissolve ore in acid/base → filter → recover metal from solution.
Casting Workflow
Melt metal → pour into mold → solidify → remove casting → clean/finish.
Forging Sequence
Heat billet → place in die → hammer/press → cool → (optional) reheating for multiple passes.
Heat‑Treatment Cycle
Anneal: heat → hold above transformation temp → slow cool.
Quench: heat → rapid water/oil/oil‑air quench → martensite.
Temper: reheat to 150‑650 °C → hold → cool → reduced brittleness.
Shot Peening
Accelerate steel shot → impact surface → create overlapping dimples → compressive residual stress field.
Electroless Deposition
Immerse substrate in metal‑salt bath + reducing agent → autocatalytic metal layer grows uniformly.
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🔍 Key Comparisons
Chemical vs. Physical Metallurgy – Chemical: reactions (reduction, corrosion). Physical: structure & mechanical properties.
Ferrous vs. Non‑Ferrous Alloys – Ferrous: iron base, magnetic (except austenitic stainless), high strength. Non‑Ferrous: lighter, non‑magnetic, often superior corrosion resistance.
Annealing vs. Quenching – Anneal: slow cooling → soft, ductile. Quench: rapid cooling → hard, brittle martensite.
Electroplating vs. Electroless Deposition – Electroplating: requires current, works best on conductive surfaces. Electroless: chemical reduction, coats non‑conductors.
Casting vs. Additive Manufacturing – Casting: molten metal fills mold; limited geometry complexity. 3‑D printing: layer‑by‑layer powder sintering/melting; high design freedom, slower for large parts.
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⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“All steel is magnetic.” → Austenitic stainless steels are austenite (γ‑Fe) and are non‑magnetic.
“Quenching always makes metal stronger.” – It increases hardness but also brittleness; tempering is needed for toughness.
“Higher carbon = better steel.” – Excess carbon (> 2 %) makes cast iron, not ductile steel.
“Shot peening weakens the surface.” – It actually introduces compressive stresses that improve fatigue life.
“Electroplating works on plastics.” – Plastics must first be made conductive (e.g., via a primer) or use electroless deposition.
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🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
“Heat‑treat as a traffic light.” – Red (heat) → Yellow (hold) → Green (cool). The speed of cooling decides the “stop” (martensite) or “go” (ferrite/pearlite) microstructures.
“Extraction is a three‑step ladder.” – Lift (crush/grade) → Separate (leach/reduce) → Collect (refine).
“Surface coatings are a shield hierarchy.” – Thin electroless → medium electroplated → thick thermal spray = increasing protection against temperature & wear.
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🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Hadfield steel – high Mn & Cr; remains non‑magnetic and work‑hardens dramatically under impact.
Titanium alloys – cannot be water‑quenched; they oxidize quickly, so inert gas or oil quenching is used.
Aluminum casting – prone to hot‑tearing; requires rapid solidification (die casting) or controlled cooling (investment casting).
Shot peening depth – limited to 0.5 mm; deeper defects need other methods (e.g., deep rolling).
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📍 When to Use Which
Choose alloy →
High strength, low cost: plain carbon steel.
Corrosion‑critical: austenitic stainless.
Lightweight, high‑strength: Al‑Cu or Mg alloy.
> 800 °C service: Ni‑based superalloy.
Select forming process →
Complex internal cavities: investment casting.
High‑volume thin walls: die casting.
Large structural parts: forging or rolling.
Custom geometry, low volume: additive manufacturing.
Pick surface treatment →
Mild corrosion, decorative: electroplating.
Non‑conductive substrate or uniform coating: electroless deposition.
High‑temperature wear: thermal spray.
Fatigue‑critical component: shot peening.
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👀 Patterns to Recognize
“High carbon → cast iron” – any Fe‑C composition > 2 % C signals cast iron, not steel.
“Rapid cooling + high‑hardness = martensite” – look for quench steps followed by high hardness values.
“Compressively stressed surface = shot peening” – dimples in micro‑fracture surface microscopy indicate shot peening.
“Layered coating = additive process” – alternating metal/ceramic layers in microscopy suggest thermal spray or 3‑D printing.
“Oxidation‑resistant alloy = Ni‑based or Cr‑rich” – presence of Ni/Cr in composition points to superalloy or stainless.
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🗂️ Exam Traps
Distractor: “All stainless steels are magnetic.” – Only ferritic and martensitic grades are; austenitic are not.
Distractor: “Quenching always improves ductility.” – It actually reduces ductility; only tempering restores it.
Distractor: “Electroplating can be applied to ceramics directly.” – Requires a conductive seed layer or electroless pre‑coat.
Distractor: “Higher alloying element = higher strength for any alloy.” – Excessive alloying can cause brittleness or processing difficulties (e.g., too much carbon → cast iron).
Distractor: “All casting defects are due to mold design.” – Many arise from improper pouring temperature, turbulence, or solidification shrinkage, not just mold shape.
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