Title: PHASE DIAGRAMS
1PHASE DIAGRAMS
- Phase Rule
- Types of Phase diagrams
- Lever Rule
2- Casting
- Metal Forming
- Welding
- Powder Processing
- Machining
Thermo-mechanical Treatments
Crystal
Atom
Structure
Microstructure
Component
Electro- magnetic
Phases
Defects
- Vacancies
- Dislocations
- Twins
- Stacking Faults
- Grain Boundaries
- Voids
- Cracks
Residual Stress
Processing determines shape and microstructure of
a component
3DEFINITIONS
Components of a system
Independent chemical species which comprise the
system Elements, Ions,Compounds E.g. Au-Cu
system Components ? Au, Cu Ice-water system
Component ? H2O Al2O3 Cr2O3 system
Components ? Al2O3, Cr2O3
4Phase
Physically distinct, chemically homogenous and
mechanically separable region of a system (e.g.
gas, crystal, amorphous...).
- Gaseous state always a single phase ? mixed at
atomic or molecular level - ?Liquid solution is a single phase ? e.g. NaCl
in H2O - ? Liquid mixture consists of two or more
phases ? e.g. Oil in water (no mixing at the
atomic/molecular level) - Solids ? In general due to several
compositions and crystals structures many
phases are possible ? For the same
composition different crystal structures
represent different phases. E.g. Fe (BCC) and
Fe (FCC) are different phases ? For the same
crystal structure different compositions
represent different phases. E.g. in Au-Cu alloy
70Au-30Cu and 30Au-70Cu are different
phases
5Phase transformation
Phase Transformation is the change of one phase
into another. E.g. ? Water ? Ice ? ?- Fe (BCC)
? ?- Fe (FCC)
Grain
The single crystalline part of polycrystalline
metal separated by similar entities by a grain
boundary
Microstructure
Structures requiring magnifications in the region
of 100 to 1000 times OR The distribution of
phases and defects in a material
6Phase diagram
Map demarcating regions of stability of various
phases. or Map that gives relationship between
phases in equilibrium in a system as a function
of T, P and composition (from textbook)
Variables / Axis of phase diagrams
- The axis are thermodynamic (T, P, V), kinetic
(t) or composition variables (C, x) - In single component systems the usual variables
are T P - In phase diagrams used in materials science the
usual variables are T x - In the study of phase transformation kinetics
Time Temperature Transformation (TTT)
diagrams or Continuous Cooling Transformation
(CCT) diagrams are also used where the axis are T
t
7The GIBBS PHASE RULE
F C ? P 2
For a system in equilibrium
F Degrees of FreedomC Number of ComponentsP
Number of Phases
or
F ? C P 2
The geometrically equivalent Eulers formula for
convex polyhedra
V0 V ? VerticesV1 E ? EdgesV2 F ? Faces
V0 ? V1 V2 2
V ? E F 2
or
Vertices degrees of Freedom
Faces Phases
Edges Components
8 12 6 2
8F
C 2
P
?
Degrees of Freedom
What you can control
What the system controls
?
Can control the no. of components added and P T
System decided how many phases to produce given
the conditions
9Variables
- C No. of Components
- P No. of Phases
- F No. of degrees of Freedom
- Variables in the system Composition
variables Thermodynamic variables - Composition of a phase specified by (C 1)
variables - No. of variables required to specify the
composition of all Phases P(C 1) - Thermodynamic variables P T (usually
considered) 2 - Total no. of variables in the system P(C 1)
2 - F lt no. of variables ? F lt P(C 1) 2 i.e.
C P 2 lt P(C 1) 2 - In a single phase system F no. of variables
- P ? ? F ?
10C 2
C 3
11Single component phase diagrams (Unary)
F C P 2
Gas
Single phase regionsF 1 1 2 2
Liquid
? (BCC)
Two phase coexistenceF 1 2 2 1
Temperature (ºC) ?
1535
1410
? (FCC)
Triple points 3 phase coexistenceF 1 3 2
0
? (HCP)
? (BCC)
Pressure (GPa) ?
12Binary Phase Diagrams
- Pressure changes often have little effect on the
equilibrium of solid phases - Binary phase diagrams are usually drawn at 1
atmosphere pressure - Variables are reduced to T composition
F C ? P 1
Phase rule for condensed phases
13F C P 1
System with complete solid solubility
M.P. of A
M.P. of B
C 1 P 2 F 0
C 2 P 2 F 1
T ?
A
B
B ?
The two component region expands withone degree
of freedom i.e. we can chose one Variable say
the T
14C 2 P 1 F 2
Variables ? T, CLB ?? 2
M.P. of A
C 1 P 2 F 0
Variables ? T, CLB, CSB ?? 3
C 2 P 2 F 1
M.P. of B
C 2 P 1 F 2
T ?
Variables ? T, CSB ?? 2
B
A
2 P
2 P
3 P
B ?
15- Complete liquid and solid solubility ?
ISOMORPHOUS PHASE DIG.
- A and B must satisfy Hume-Rothery rules
- E.g. Cu-Ni, Ag-Au, Ge-Si, Al2O3-Cr2O3
L
2200
Liquidus
L S
2100
T (ºC) ?
S
2000
Solidus
50
70
90
Al2O3
Cr2O3
10
30
Sn ?
16Tie line and Lever Rule
- Say the composition C0 is cooled slowly
(equilibrium) - At T0 there is L S equilibrium
- Solid (crystal) of composition C1 coexists with
liquid of composition C2
Cooling
L
- At T0
- The fraction of liquid (fl) is ? (C0 ? C1)
- The fraction of solid (fs) is ? (C2 ? C0)
Tie line
T0
L S
T ?
S
C0
C2
C1
A
B
B ?
17Variations to the isomorphous phase diagram
- A?B bonds stronger than A?A and B?B bonds
- Solid stabilized ? Ordered solid formation
- A?A and B?B bonds stronger than A?B bonds
- Liquid stabilized ? Phase separation in the
solid state
L ?
L
L
L ?
?
E.g. Au-Ni
?
?
?1
?2
? ?
?1 ?2
?1 ?2 are different only in lattice parameter
Ordered solid
18Congruently melting alloys
Variables ? T, CLB, CSB ?? 3
C 2 P 2 F 1
- Congruently melting alloys- just like a pure
metal - But in requiring that CLB CSB we have
exhausted the degree of freedom. Hence T is
automatically fixed
19Congruent transformations
- Melting point minimum
- Melting point maximum
- Order disorder transformation
- Formation of an intermediate phase
20Eutectic reactionL ? ? ?
Liquidus
327?C
L
300
232?C
Solidus
L ?
200
? L
?
T (ºC) ?
183?C
?
100
? ?
Solvus
62
97
18
50
70
90
Pb
Sn
10
30
Sn ?
21Eutectic reactionL ? ? ?
L
300
L ?
200
? L
?
T (ºC) ?
?
C 2 P 3 F 0
? ?
100
Increasing solubility of B in A with ?T
50
70
90
A
B
10
30
B ?
22Isomorphous to Eutectic
- A?A and B?B bonds stronger than A?B bonds
- Liquid stabilized
L
L ?
?
23Liquid (melt)
Cooling
L
Hypereutectic composition
300
? L
L ?
200
?
?
?
100
? ?
50
70
90
Pb
Sn
10
30
24Peritectic Phase Diagram
Peritectic reactionL ? ? ?
1700
L
1500
L ?
1300
T (ºC) ?
Melting points of the components vastly different
1100
?
? ?
900
?
25Isomorphous to Peritectic
26Fe-Cementite diagram
EutecticL ? ? Fe3C
Peritectic L ? ? ?
L
1493ºC
?
L ?
1147ºC
2.06
?
Eutectoid ? ? ? Fe3C
? Fe3C
723ºC
?
0.025
T ?
Fe3C
Fe
6.7
0.8
4.3
RT0.008
0.16
C ?
27- Cementite is metastable (more readily nucleates
as compared to graphite the stable phase) - Cementite can decompose into graphite- but
usually does not- practically an equilibrium
phase - Austenite (?) ? FCC, Ferrite (?) ? BCC,
Cementite (Fe3C) ? Orthorhombic
28?
? Fe3C
?
? Fe3C
Eutectoid ? ? ? Fe3C
T ?
Fe
0.02
0.8
C ?
29Cooling
?
C1
C2
C3
? Fe3C
?
? Fe3C
Eutectoid ? ? ? Fe3C
T ?
Fe
0.02
0.8
C ?
30C1
Pearlite a microconstituent
C2
C3
31Please read section 7.7 on Zone refining
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