Difference between revisions of "Materials science" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:Materials science tetrahedron;structure, processing, performance, and proprerties.JPG|thumb|The Materials Science Tetrahedron. It often also includes Characterization at the center.]]
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'''Materials science''' is an interdisciplinary field involving the study of different types of materials and the applications of this knowledge to various areas of science and engineering. It includes elements of [[applied physics]] and [[chemistry]], as well as [[chemical engineering|chemical]], [[mechanical engineering|mechanical]], [[civil engineering|civil]] and [[electrical engineering|electrical]] engineering. With the recent surge of interest in [[nanoscience]]* and [[nanotechnology]], materials science has been propelled to the forefront at many academic institutions and research facilities.
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[[Image:Materials science tetrahedron;structure, processing, performance, and proprerties.JPG|thumb|The Materials Science Tetrahedron shows the four main areas in which materials are studied. It often includes Characterization at the center.]]
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'''Materials science''' is an interdisciplinary field involving the study of different types of materials and the applications of knowledge about these materials to various areas of science and engineering. It combines elements of applied [[physics]] and [[chemistry]], as well as [[chemical engineering|chemical]], [[mechanical engineering|mechanical]], [[civil engineering|civil]] and [[electrical engineering|electrical]] engineering. Materials science and materials engineering are often combined into a larger field of study.
  
Besides its importance for industrial applications, materials science has gradually developed into a field that provides tests for condensed matter or solid state theories. New physics emerges because of the diverse new material properties needed to be explained.
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Materials used in early human history included [[metal]]s, [[glass]]es, and clay-based [[ceramics]]. The past century has witnessed a surge in the development of new materials, including [[plastic]]s, advanced ceramics, [[semiconductor]]s, [[superconductivity|superconductor]]s, [[liquid crystal]]s, [[Bose-Einstein condensate]]s, and nanoscale substances, with a wide range of applications. Furthermore, materials science has grown to include testing these more exotic forms of condensed matter and developing new physics theories to explain their behavior. Consequently, materials science has been propelled to the forefront at many academic institutions and research facilities.
 +
 
 +
Materials research at the basic level can lead to unprecedented influence on society. For example, semiconductor materials, which are ubiquitous in cars, telephones, computers, clocks, kitchen appliances, children’s toys, satellites, telescopes, and more, were a product of materials science research—into the electronic properties of the element germanium. Further research led to the replacement of germanium with the less costly silicon and to diverse approaches to modifying silicon’s properties by implanting other elements, such as phosphorous or boron, into the silicon matrix. Since their discovery in 1947, semiconductors have been steadily improved through materials science research driven by ever-increasing performance demands from the computer industry.
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{{toc}}
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Efforts to apply ethical considerations to Materials Science quickly reach what is a common barrier between ethics and the combined fields of science and technology. An individual scientist, for example, who would want to conduct research toward such a noble goal as developing a light-weight and durable structural plastic that is readily recyclable must first either find and join a research group that is already funded to support such research or find an independent funding source for such research.  
  
 
== Historical overview ==
 
== Historical overview ==
  
Materials science is one of the oldest forms of applied science and engineering. In the development of human civilization, the defining point of each era has often been described in terms of the human ability to work with a new type of material. Examples are the Stone Age, Bronze Age, and Steel Age.
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Materials science is one of the oldest forms of applied science and engineering. In the history of human civilization, different eras have often been retrospectively identified according to an advance in the human ability to work with a new type of material. Examples are the [[Stone Age]], [[Bronze Age]], and [[Iron Age]]. A major breakthrough in the understanding of materials occurred in the late nineteenth century, when [[Willard Gibbs]] demonstrated that [[thermodynamics|thermodynamic]] properties relating to [[atoms|atomic structure]] in various [[phase (matter)|phases]] are related to the physical properties of a material.
  
Before the 1960s, (and in some cases decades after), many ''materials science'' departments at academic and research institutions were named ''[[metallurgy]]'' departments, because the emphasis was on the study of metals and their uses. The field has since broadened to include every class of materials, such as [[ceramic]]s, [[polymers]], [[semiconductors]], magnetic materials, and biological materials (such as medical implants).
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Before the 1960s, (and in some cases decades after), many ''materials science'' departments at academic and research institutions were named ''[[metallurgy]]'' departments, because the emphasis was on the study of metals and their uses. The field has since broadened to include every class of materials, such as [[ceramic]]s, [[polymers]], [[semiconductors]], superconductors, superfluids, magnetic materials, medical implant materials, and biological materials.
  
Many important elements of modern materials science have resulted from the [[space race]]*. In particular, the understanding and engineering of metallic [[alloys]], [[ceramics]], and other materials were useful for the construction of space vehicles, space suits, and so forth, and the new knowledge was found valuable for various consumer and industrial applications as well.
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Many important elements of modern materials science have resulted from the [[space race]]. In particular, the understanding and engineering of metallic [[alloys]], [[ceramics]], and other materials were useful for the construction of space vehicles, space suits, and so forth, and the new knowledge was found valuable for various consumer and industrial applications as well. Materials science has laid the physical foundations of 21st century civilization, being integral to everything from fiber optic cables to tennis shoes, and from solar cells to sail boats. Materials science will continue to be centrally important in the quest for finding technological solutions toward sustainable development in the face of environmental degradation and the continued buildup of greenhouse gases due to the burning of carbon-based fuels.
  
 
== Fundamentals of materials science ==
 
== Fundamentals of materials science ==
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In materials science, the researcher conducts a systematic investigation of each material, in terms of its structure, properties, processing, and performance. The research often leads to new applications of known materials and the creation of new materials with desired properties.
 
In materials science, the researcher conducts a systematic investigation of each material, in terms of its structure, properties, processing, and performance. The research often leads to new applications of known materials and the creation of new materials with desired properties.
  
On a fundamental level, this field relates the [[physical property|properties]]* and performance of a material to its atomic-scale structure and the different phases it can go through. The major factors that determine the structure and properties of a material are the nature of its constituent chemical elements and the way in which the material was processed into its final form. These factors, related through the laws of [[thermodynamics]], govern the material’s [[microstructure]], and thus its properties.
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On a fundamental level, this field relates the [[physical property|properties]] and performance of a material to its atomic-scale structure and the different phases it can go through. The major factors that determine the structure and properties of a material are the nature of its constituent chemical elements and the way in which the material was processed into its final form. These factors, related through the laws of [[thermodynamics]], govern the material’s [[microstructure]], and thus its properties.  
  
The manufacture of a perfect [[crystal]] of a material is physically impossible. Instead, materials scientists manipulate the [[crystallographic defect|defects]] in crystalline materials, thereby creating a material with the desired properties. On an atomic scale, the defects in a crystal could mean that atoms of one element may be missing or replaced by atoms of other elements.
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An old adage in materials science says: "materials are like people; it is the defects that make them interesting". Given the limits of today's technology, that is good, because the manufacture of a perfect [[crystal]] of a material is physically impossible. Instead, materials scientists manipulate a material's [[crystallographic defect|defects]] to create materials with the desired properties. On an atomic scale, the defects in a crystal could mean that atoms of one element may be missing or replaced by atoms of other elements.
  
Furthermore, not all materials have a regular crystalline structure. [[Glass|Glasses]], some [[ceramic]]s, and many natural materials are [[Amorphous solid|amorphous]]—not possessing any long-range order in their atomic arrangements. These materials are much harder to engineer than crystalline materials. Polymers are a mixed case, with varying degrees of crystallinity, and their study commonly combines elements of chemical and statistical thermodynamics to give thermodynamic (rather than mechanical) descriptions of physical properties.
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Not all materials have a regular crystalline structure. [[Glass|Glasses]] and some [[ceramic]]s—unlike many natural materials— are [[Amorphous solid|amorphous]], that is, they do not possess any long-range order in their atomic arrangements. Engineering these materials is much more difficult than engineering crystalline materials. Polymers may exhibit varying degrees of crystallinity, and studying them requires a combination of elements of chemical and statistical thermodynamics to give thermodynamic (rather than mechanical) descriptions of physical properties.
  
 
== Materials in Industry ==
 
== Materials in Industry ==
  
Radical [[Timeline of materials technology|materials advances]]* drive the creation of new products and even new industries. At the same time, stable industries employ materials scientists to make incremental improvements and troubleshoot issues with currently used materials. Industrial applications of materials science include the design of materials and their cost-benefit tradeoffs in industrial production.
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Radical advances in understanding and manipulating [[Timeline of materials technology|materials]] drive the creation of new products and even new industries. At the same time, stable industries employ materials scientists to make incremental improvements and troubleshoot issues with currently used materials. Industrial applications of materials science include the design of materials and their cost-benefit tradeoffs in industrial production.
  
 
Techniques used for processing materials include:
 
Techniques used for processing materials include:
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* [[welding]]
 
* [[welding]]
 
* [[ion implantation]]
 
* [[ion implantation]]
* [[crystal growth]]*
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* [[crystal growth]]
* [[thin-film deposition]]*
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* [[thin-film deposition]]
* [[sintering]]*
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* [[sintering]]
 
* [[glassblowing]]
 
* [[glassblowing]]
  
 
Techniques used for analyzing (characterizing) materials include:
 
Techniques used for analyzing (characterizing) materials include:
* [[electron microscopy]]
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* [[electron microscope|electron microscopy]]
* [[X-ray diffraction]]*
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* [[X-ray diffraction]]
* [[calorimetry]]*
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* [[calorimetry]]
* [[nuclear microscopy (HEFIB)]]*
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* [[nuclear microscopy (HEFIB)]]
* [[Rutherford backscattering]]*
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* [[Rutherford backscattering]]
* [[neutron diffraction]]*
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* [[neutron diffraction]]
  
The overlap between physics and materials science has led to the offshoot field of ''materials physics'', which is concerned with the physical properties of [[material]]*s. The approach is generally more macroscopic and applied than in [[condensed matter physics]].
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The overlap between physics and materials science has lent itself naturally the development of the interface field of ''materials physics'', which is concerned with the physical properties of [[material]]s. The approach is generally more macroscopic and applied than in [[condensed matter physics]].
  
 
== Classes of materials ==
 
== Classes of materials ==
  
Materials science encompasses various classes of materials, such as:
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Materials science encompasses various classes of materials, some of which overlap. Examples are:
 
# [[Ionic bond|Ionic crystals]] (crystals in which the atoms are held together by ionic bonds)
 
# [[Ionic bond|Ionic crystals]] (crystals in which the atoms are held together by ionic bonds)
 
# [[Covalent bond|Covalent crystals]] (crystals in which the atoms are held together by covalent bonds)
 
# [[Covalent bond|Covalent crystals]] (crystals in which the atoms are held together by covalent bonds)
 +
# Vitreous (glassy) materials
 
# [[Metal]]s
 
# [[Metal]]s
# [[Intermetallics]]*
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# [[Intermetallics]]
# [[Semiconductor]]s
 
 
# [[Polymer]]s
 
# [[Polymer]]s
# [[Composite material]]*s
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# [[Composite material]]s
# [[Vitreous material]]*s
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# [[Biomaterial]]s (materials derived from or intended for use with biological systems)
 +
# [[Electronic Materials|Electronic]] and [[Magnetic Materials|magnetic]] materials (materials such as [[semiconductors]] used to create [[integrated circuit]]s, [[storage media]], [[sensors]], and other devices)
 +
# [[Ceramic]]s and [[refractory|refractories]] (high-temperature materials, including reinforced carbon-carbon (RCC), polycrystalline [[silicon carbide]], and [[transformation-toughened ceramics]])
 +
 
 
Each class of materials may involve a separate field of study.
 
Each class of materials may involve a separate field of study.
  
==Sub-fields of materials science==
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==Subfields of materials science==  
  
* [[Nanotechnology]] --- rigorously, the study of materials where the effects of [[quantum confinement]], the [[Gibbs-Thomson effect]], or any other effect only present at the nanoscale is the defining property of the material; but more commonly, it is the creation and study of materials whose defining structural properties are anywhere from less than a [[nanometer]] to one hundred nanometers in scale, such as molecularly engineered materials.
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* [[Nanotechnology]]: As commonly understood, nanotechnology is the field of applied science and technology concerned with the formation, study, and control of materials having a width ranging from less than 1 nanometer (10<sup>&minus;9</sup> meter) to 100 nanometers. These materials are generally engineered on a molecular scale. On a more rigorous level, nanoscience involves the study of materials whose defining properties are present only at the nanoscale.
* [[Crystallography]] --- the study of how atoms in a solid fill space, the [[crystallographic defect|defects]] associated with [[crystal structure]]s such as [[grain boundaries]] and [[dislocations]], and the characterization of these structures and their relation to physical properties.
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* [[Crystallography]]: This is the study of the arrangement of atoms in a crystalline solid and the relationship between the crystalline structures and their physical properties. It includes the determination of [[crystallographic defect|defects]] associated with [[crystal]] structures.
* [[Characterization (materials science)|Materials Characterization]] --- such as diffraction with [[x-rays]], [[electrons]], or [[neutrons]], and various forms of [[spectroscopy]] and [[chemical analysis]] such as [[Raman spectroscopy]], [[energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy|energy-dispersive spectroscopy]] (EDS), [[chromatography]], [[thermal analysis]], [[electron microscope]] analysis, etc., in order to understand and define the properties of materials. See also [[List of surface analysis methods]]
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* [[Characterization (materials science)|Materials characterization]]: Information needed for understanding and defining the properties of materials is acquired through such techniques as diffraction of [[X-ray]]s, [[electron]]s, or [[neutron]]s, and various forms of [[spectroscopy]], [[chromatography]], [[thermal analysis]], or [[electron microscopy]].
* [[Metallurgy]] --- the study of metals and their alloys, including their extraction, [[microstructure]] and processing.
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* [[Metallurgy]]: This involves the study of metals and their alloys, including their extraction, [[microstructure]], and processing.
* [[Biomaterial]]s --- materials that are derived from and/or used with biological systems.
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* [[Tribology]]: This is the study of the wear of materials due to [[friction]] and other factors.
* [[Electronic Materials|Electronic]] and [[Magnetic Materials|magnetic]] materials --- materials such as [[semiconductors]] used to create [[integrated circuits]], [[storage media]], [[sensors]], and other devices.
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* [[Surface chemistry|Surface science]]: It involves study of the structures and interactions occurring at the interfaces of  solids and gases, solids and liquids, and solids and solids.
* [[Tribology]] --- the study of the wear of materials due to [[friction]] and other factors.
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* [[Glass science]]: It involves the study of noncrystalline materials, including inorganic glasses, vitreous metals, and non-oxide glasses.
* [[Surface chemistry|Surface science]] --- interactions and structures between solid-gas solid-liquid or solid-solid interfaces.
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Some practitioners consider [[rheology]] a subfield of materials science, because it can cover any material that flows. Modern rheology, however, typically deals with non-Newtonian [[fluid dynamics]], so it is often considered a subfield of [[continuum mechanics]].
* [[Ceramic]]s and [[refractory|refractories]] --- high temperature materials including structural ceramics such as [[Reinforced carbon-carbon|RCC]], polycrystalline [[silicon carbide]] and [[transformation toughened ceramics]]
 
Some practitioners often consider [[rheology]] a sub-field of materials science, because it can cover any material that flows. However, modern rheology typically deals with non-Newtonian [[fluid dynamics]], so it is often considered a sub-field of [[continuum mechanics]].
 
* [[Glass Science]] --- any non-crystalline material including inorganic glasses, vitreous metals and non-oxide glasses.
 
  
 
===Topics that form the basis of materials science===
 
===Topics that form the basis of materials science===
  
* [[Thermodynamics]], [[statistical mechanics]], [[chemical kinetics|kinetics]] and [[physical chemistry]], for [[phase (matter)|phase]] stability, transformations (physical and chemical) and diagrams.
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* [[Thermodynamics]], [[statistical mechanics]], [[chemical kinetics]], and [[physical chemistry]]: to understand [[phase (matter)|phase]] stability and physical and chemical transformations.
* [[Crystallography]] and [[chemical bonding]], for understanding how atoms in a material are arranged.
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* [[Chemical bond]]ing: to understand the bonds between atoms of the material.
* [[Mechanics]], to understand the mechanical properties of materials and their structural applications.
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* [[Mechanics]] of materials: to understand the mechanical properties of materials and their structural applications.
* [[Solid-state physics]] and [[quantum mechanics]], for the understanding of the electronic, thermal, magnetic, chemical, structural and optical properties of materials.
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* Solid-state [[physics]] and [[quantum mechanics]]: to understand the electronic, thermal, magnetic, chemical, structural, and optical properties of materials.
* [[Diffraction]] and [[wave mechanics]], for the characterization of materials.
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* Solid-state [[chemistry]] and [[polymer]] science: to understand the properties of polymers (including [[plastic]]s), [[colloid]]s, [[ceramic]]s, and [[liquid crystal]]s.
* [[Chemistry]] and [[polymer science]], for the understanding of [[plastics]], colloids, ceramics, liquid crystals, [[solid state chemistry]], and [[polymers]].
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* [[Biology]]: for the integration of materials into biological systems.
* [[Biology]], for the integration of materials into biological systems.
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* [[Continuum mechanics]] and [[statistics]]: for the study of fluid flows and ensemble systems.
* [[Continuum mechanics]] and [[statistics]], for the study of fluid flows and ensemble systems.
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* [[Diffraction]] and [[wave mechanics]]: for the characterization of materials.
* [[Mechanics of materials]], for the study of the relation between the mechanical behavior of materials and their microstructures.
+
 
 +
==Timeline of materials technology==
 +
===Before Common Era===
 +
 
 +
* 29,000–25,000 B.C.E. - First [[ceramic]] appears
 +
*Third millennium B.C.E. - [[Copper]] [[metallurgy]] is developed and copper is used for ornamentation
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*Second millennium B.C.E. - [[Bronze]] is used for [[weapon]]s and [[armor]]
 +
*Sixteenth century B.C.E. - The [[Hittites]] develop crude [[iron]] metallurgy
 +
*Thirteenth century B.C.E. - Invention of [[steel]], when [[iron]] and [[charcoal]] are appropriately combined
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*First millennium B.C.E. - [[Pewter]] begins to be used in [[China]] and [[Ancient Egypt|Egypt]]
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*Tenth century B.C.E. - [[Glass]] production begins in [[Greece]] and [[Syria]]
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*50s B.C.E. - Glassblowing techniques flourish in [[Phoenicia]]
 +
*20s B.C.E. - [[Roman Empire|Roman]] architect [[Vitruvius]] describes low-water-content method for mixing [[concrete]]
 +
 
 +
===First millennium===
 +
 
 +
*700s - [[Porcelain]] is invented in China
 +
 
 +
===Second millennium===
 +
 
 +
*1448 - [[Johannes Gutenberg]] develops [[type metal]] [[alloy]]
 +
*1450s - [[Cristallo]], a clear soda-based glass is invented by [[Angelo Barovier]]
 +
*1590 - Glass [[lens (optics)|lens]]es are developed in the [[Netherlands]] and used for the first time in [[microscope]]s and [[telescope]]s
 +
 
 +
===Eighteenth century===
 +
 
 +
*1738 - [[William Champion]] patents a process for the production of metallic [[zinc]] by [[distillation]] from [[calamine]] and charcoal
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*1740 - [[Benjamin Huntsman]] developed the [[crucible steel]] technique
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*1779 - [[Bry Higgins]] issued a [[patent]] for hydraulic cement ([[stucco]]) for use as an exterior [[plaster]]
 +
*1799 - [[Alessandro Volta]] makes a copper/zinc [[acid]] [[battery (electricity)|battery]]
 +
 
 +
===Nineteenth century===
  
==Some nonacademic materials science research facilities==
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*1821 - [[Thomas Johann Seebeck]] invents the [[thermocouple]]
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*1824 - Patent issued to [[Joseph Aspin]] for [[portland cement]]
 +
*1825 - [[Hans Christian Ørsted]] produces metallic [[aluminum]]
 +
*1839 - [[Charles Goodyear]] invents [[Vulcanization|vulcanized rubber]]
 +
*1839 - [[Louis Daguerre]] and [[William Fox Talbot]] invent [[silver]]-based [[photography|photographic]] processes
 +
*1855 - [[Bessemer process]] for mass production of steel patented
 +
*1861 - [[James Clerk Maxwell]] demonstrates color photography
 +
*1883 - [[Charles Fritts]] makes the first [[solar cell]]s using [[selenium]] wafers
  
'''Government laboratories'''
+
===Twentieth century===
* [[Argonne National Laboratory]]*
 
* [[Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory]]*
 
* [[Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory]]*
 
* [[Los Alamos National Laboratory]]*
 
* [[Max Planck Institute]]*
 
* [[Oak Ridge National Laboratory]]*
 
  
'''Corporate facilities'''
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*1902 - [[Auguste Verneuil]] develops the [[Verneuil process]] for making [[synthetic]] [[ruby|rubies]]
* [[DuPont]]*
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*1909 - [[Leo Baekeland]] presents [[Bakelite]], a hard, thermosetting [[plastic]]
* GE Global Research
+
*1911 - [[Heike Kamerlingh Onnes]] discovers [[superconductivity]]
* IBM [[Thomas J. Watson Research Center]]*
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*1912 - [[Harry Brearley]] invents stainless [[steel]]
 +
*1916 - [[Jan Czochralski]] invents a method for growing single [[crystal]]s of [[metal]]s
 +
*1924 - Corning Glass Works scientists invent [[Pyrex]], a glass with a very low [[coefficient of thermal expansion]]
 +
*1931 - [[Julius Nieuwland]] develops the synthetic [[rubber]] called [[neoprene]]
 +
*1931 - [[Wallace Carothers]] develops [[nylon]]
 +
*1938 - [[Roy J. Plunkett|Roy Plunkett]] discovers the process for making poly-tetrafluoroethylene, better known as [[teflon]]
 +
*1947 - First [[germanium]] [[transistor]] invented
 +
*1947 - First commercial application of a [[piezoelectricity|piezoelectric]] [[ceramic]]: [[barium titanate]] used as a [[phonograph]] [[needle]]
 +
*1951 - Individual [[atom]]s seen for the first time, using the [[field ion microscope]]
 +
*1953 - [[Karl Ziegler]] discovers metallic [[catalyst]]s, allowing the production of [[polyethylene]] [[polymer]]s with greatly improved strength
 +
*1954 - Six percent efficiency [[silicon]] solar cells made at Bell Laboratories
 +
*1959 - [[Pilkington Brothers]] patent the float glass process
 +
*1962 - Invention of [[SQUID]] (superconducting quantum interference device)
 +
*1968 - [[Liquid crystal display]] (LCD) developed by [[RCA]]
 +
*1970 - Silica [[optical fiber]]s grown by Corning Incorporated
 +
*1970 - Invention of AOD (argon oxygen decarburization) refining
 +
*1980 - Development of duplex stainless steels that resist oxidation in chlorides
  
==Significant journals==
+
==See also==
  
* [[Nature Materials]]*
+
* [[Alloy]]
* [[Acta Materialia]]*
+
* [[Ceramic]]
* [[JOM]]*
+
* [[Concrete]]
* [[Advanced Materials]]*
+
* [[Crystal]]
* [[Computational materials science]]*
+
* [[Glass]]
* [[Advanced Functional Materials]]*
+
* [[Metal]]
* [http://www.rsc.org/materials Journal of Materials Chemistry]
+
* [[Plastic]]
* [http://www.azom.com/azojomo.asp Journal of Materials Online - Open Access]
+
* [[Polymer]]
* [[Metallurgical and Materials Transactions]]*
+
* [[Liquid crystal]]
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
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  | edition = 5th edition
 
  | edition = 5th edition
 
  | publisher = Thomson-Engineering
 
  | publisher = Thomson-Engineering
  | id = ISBN 0-534-55396-6
+
  | id = ISBN 0534553966
 +
}}
 +
*{{cite book
 +
|last = Eberhart
 +
|first = Mark
 +
|year = 2003
 +
|title = Why Things Break: Understanding the World by the Way It Comes Apart 
 +
|publisher = Harmony
 +
|id = ISBN 1400047609
 
}}
 
}}
 
*{{cite book
 
*{{cite book
Line 129: Line 190:
 
  |first = David R.
 
  |first = David R.
 
  |year = 1995  
 
  |year = 1995  
  |title = Introduction to the Thermodynamics of Materials
+
  |title = Introduction to the Thermodynamics of Materials  
 
  |edition = 4th edition
 
  |edition = 4th edition
 
  |publisher = Taylor and Francis Publishing
 
  |publisher = Taylor and Francis Publishing
  |id = ISBN 1-56032-992-0
+
  |id = ISBN 1560329920
}}
 
*{{cite book
 
|last = Eberhart
 
|first = Mark
 
|year = 2003
 
|title = Why Things Break : Understanding the World by the Way It Comes Apart 
 
|publisher = Harmony
 
|id = ISBN 1-4000-4760-9
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
*{{cite book
 
*{{cite book
 
  |last = Gordon  
 
  |last = Gordon  
 
  |first = James Edward
 
  |first = James Edward
  |year = 1984
+
  |year = 1984
  |title = The New Science of Strong Materials or Why You Don't Fall Through the Floor
+
  |title = The New Science of Strong Materials or Why You Don't Fall Through the Floor  
  |edition = eissue edition
+
  |edition = Reissue edition
 
  |publisher = Princeton University Press  
 
  |publisher = Princeton University Press  
  |id = ISBN 0-691-02380-8
+
  |id = ISBN 0691023808
 
}}
 
}}
  
==See also==
 
  
* [[Alloy]]
+
==External links==
* [[Ceramic]]
+
All links retrieved November 7, 2022.
* [[Crystal]]
+
* [http://pubs.rsc.org/en/journals/journalissues/jm?e=1#!issueid=jm022048&type=archive&issnprint=0959-9428 Journal of Materials Chemistry]
* [[Glass]]
+
* [http://www.azom.com/azojomo.asp Journal of Materials Online - Open Access]
* [[Metal]]
+
 
* [[Plastic]]
 
* [[Polymer]]
 
* [[Timeline of materials technology]]
 
* [[Bio-based material]]s
 
* [[Liquid crystal]]
 
  
 
{{BranchesofChemistry}}
 
{{BranchesofChemistry}}
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[[Category:Technology]]
 
[[Category:Technology]]
  
{{credit|85686176}}
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{{credit2|Materials_science|85686176|Materials_science|203096528|Timeline_of_materials_technology|84294626}}

Latest revision as of 16:49, 7 November 2022


The Materials Science Tetrahedron shows the four main areas in which materials are studied. It often includes Characterization at the center.

Materials science is an interdisciplinary field involving the study of different types of materials and the applications of knowledge about these materials to various areas of science and engineering. It combines elements of applied physics and chemistry, as well as chemical, mechanical, civil and electrical engineering. Materials science and materials engineering are often combined into a larger field of study.

Materials used in early human history included metals, glasses, and clay-based ceramics. The past century has witnessed a surge in the development of new materials, including plastics, advanced ceramics, semiconductors, superconductors, liquid crystals, Bose-Einstein condensates, and nanoscale substances, with a wide range of applications. Furthermore, materials science has grown to include testing these more exotic forms of condensed matter and developing new physics theories to explain their behavior. Consequently, materials science has been propelled to the forefront at many academic institutions and research facilities.

Materials research at the basic level can lead to unprecedented influence on society. For example, semiconductor materials, which are ubiquitous in cars, telephones, computers, clocks, kitchen appliances, children’s toys, satellites, telescopes, and more, were a product of materials science research—into the electronic properties of the element germanium. Further research led to the replacement of germanium with the less costly silicon and to diverse approaches to modifying silicon’s properties by implanting other elements, such as phosphorous or boron, into the silicon matrix. Since their discovery in 1947, semiconductors have been steadily improved through materials science research driven by ever-increasing performance demands from the computer industry.

Efforts to apply ethical considerations to Materials Science quickly reach what is a common barrier between ethics and the combined fields of science and technology. An individual scientist, for example, who would want to conduct research toward such a noble goal as developing a light-weight and durable structural plastic that is readily recyclable must first either find and join a research group that is already funded to support such research or find an independent funding source for such research.

Historical overview

Materials science is one of the oldest forms of applied science and engineering. In the history of human civilization, different eras have often been retrospectively identified according to an advance in the human ability to work with a new type of material. Examples are the Stone Age, Bronze Age, and Iron Age. A major breakthrough in the understanding of materials occurred in the late nineteenth century, when Willard Gibbs demonstrated that thermodynamic properties relating to atomic structure in various phases are related to the physical properties of a material.

Before the 1960s, (and in some cases decades after), many materials science departments at academic and research institutions were named metallurgy departments, because the emphasis was on the study of metals and their uses. The field has since broadened to include every class of materials, such as ceramics, polymers, semiconductors, superconductors, superfluids, magnetic materials, medical implant materials, and biological materials.

Many important elements of modern materials science have resulted from the space race. In particular, the understanding and engineering of metallic alloys, ceramics, and other materials were useful for the construction of space vehicles, space suits, and so forth, and the new knowledge was found valuable for various consumer and industrial applications as well. Materials science has laid the physical foundations of 21st century civilization, being integral to everything from fiber optic cables to tennis shoes, and from solar cells to sail boats. Materials science will continue to be centrally important in the quest for finding technological solutions toward sustainable development in the face of environmental degradation and the continued buildup of greenhouse gases due to the burning of carbon-based fuels.

Fundamentals of materials science

In materials science, the researcher conducts a systematic investigation of each material, in terms of its structure, properties, processing, and performance. The research often leads to new applications of known materials and the creation of new materials with desired properties.

On a fundamental level, this field relates the properties and performance of a material to its atomic-scale structure and the different phases it can go through. The major factors that determine the structure and properties of a material are the nature of its constituent chemical elements and the way in which the material was processed into its final form. These factors, related through the laws of thermodynamics, govern the material’s microstructure, and thus its properties.

An old adage in materials science says: "materials are like people; it is the defects that make them interesting". Given the limits of today's technology, that is good, because the manufacture of a perfect crystal of a material is physically impossible. Instead, materials scientists manipulate a material's defects to create materials with the desired properties. On an atomic scale, the defects in a crystal could mean that atoms of one element may be missing or replaced by atoms of other elements.

Not all materials have a regular crystalline structure. Glasses and some ceramics—unlike many natural materials— are amorphous, that is, they do not possess any long-range order in their atomic arrangements. Engineering these materials is much more difficult than engineering crystalline materials. Polymers may exhibit varying degrees of crystallinity, and studying them requires a combination of elements of chemical and statistical thermodynamics to give thermodynamic (rather than mechanical) descriptions of physical properties.

Materials in Industry

Radical advances in understanding and manipulating materials drive the creation of new products and even new industries. At the same time, stable industries employ materials scientists to make incremental improvements and troubleshoot issues with currently used materials. Industrial applications of materials science include the design of materials and their cost-benefit tradeoffs in industrial production.

Techniques used for processing materials include:

  • casting
  • rolling
  • welding
  • ion implantation
  • crystal growth
  • thin-film deposition
  • sintering
  • glassblowing

Techniques used for analyzing (characterizing) materials include:

The overlap between physics and materials science has lent itself naturally the development of the interface field of materials physics, which is concerned with the physical properties of materials. The approach is generally more macroscopic and applied than in condensed matter physics.

Classes of materials

Materials science encompasses various classes of materials, some of which overlap. Examples are:

  1. Ionic crystals (crystals in which the atoms are held together by ionic bonds)
  2. Covalent crystals (crystals in which the atoms are held together by covalent bonds)
  3. Vitreous (glassy) materials
  4. Metals
  5. Intermetallics
  6. Polymers
  7. Composite materials
  8. Biomaterials (materials derived from or intended for use with biological systems)
  9. Electronic and magnetic materials (materials such as semiconductors used to create integrated circuits, storage media, sensors, and other devices)
  10. Ceramics and refractories (high-temperature materials, including reinforced carbon-carbon (RCC), polycrystalline silicon carbide, and transformation-toughened ceramics)

Each class of materials may involve a separate field of study.

Subfields of materials science

  • Nanotechnology: As commonly understood, nanotechnology is the field of applied science and technology concerned with the formation, study, and control of materials having a width ranging from less than 1 nanometer (10−9 meter) to 100 nanometers. These materials are generally engineered on a molecular scale. On a more rigorous level, nanoscience involves the study of materials whose defining properties are present only at the nanoscale.
  • Crystallography: This is the study of the arrangement of atoms in a crystalline solid and the relationship between the crystalline structures and their physical properties. It includes the determination of defects associated with crystal structures.
  • Materials characterization: Information needed for understanding and defining the properties of materials is acquired through such techniques as diffraction of X-rays, electrons, or neutrons, and various forms of spectroscopy, chromatography, thermal analysis, or electron microscopy.
  • Metallurgy: This involves the study of metals and their alloys, including their extraction, microstructure, and processing.
  • Tribology: This is the study of the wear of materials due to friction and other factors.
  • Surface science: It involves study of the structures and interactions occurring at the interfaces of solids and gases, solids and liquids, and solids and solids.
  • Glass science: It involves the study of noncrystalline materials, including inorganic glasses, vitreous metals, and non-oxide glasses.

Some practitioners consider rheology a subfield of materials science, because it can cover any material that flows. Modern rheology, however, typically deals with non-Newtonian fluid dynamics, so it is often considered a subfield of continuum mechanics.

Topics that form the basis of materials science

  • Thermodynamics, statistical mechanics, chemical kinetics, and physical chemistry: to understand phase stability and physical and chemical transformations.
  • Chemical bonding: to understand the bonds between atoms of the material.
  • Mechanics of materials: to understand the mechanical properties of materials and their structural applications.
  • Solid-state physics and quantum mechanics: to understand the electronic, thermal, magnetic, chemical, structural, and optical properties of materials.
  • Solid-state chemistry and polymer science: to understand the properties of polymers (including plastics), colloids, ceramics, and liquid crystals.
  • Biology: for the integration of materials into biological systems.
  • Continuum mechanics and statistics: for the study of fluid flows and ensemble systems.
  • Diffraction and wave mechanics: for the characterization of materials.

Timeline of materials technology

Before Common Era

  • 29,000–25,000 B.C.E. - First ceramic appears
  • Third millennium B.C.E. - Copper metallurgy is developed and copper is used for ornamentation
  • Second millennium B.C.E. - Bronze is used for weapons and armor
  • Sixteenth century B.C.E. - The Hittites develop crude iron metallurgy
  • Thirteenth century B.C.E. - Invention of steel, when iron and charcoal are appropriately combined
  • First millennium B.C.E. - Pewter begins to be used in China and Egypt
  • Tenth century B.C.E. - Glass production begins in Greece and Syria
  • 50s B.C.E. - Glassblowing techniques flourish in Phoenicia
  • 20s B.C.E. - Roman architect Vitruvius describes low-water-content method for mixing concrete

First millennium

  • 700s - Porcelain is invented in China

Second millennium

Eighteenth century

  • 1738 - William Champion patents a process for the production of metallic zinc by distillation from calamine and charcoal
  • 1740 - Benjamin Huntsman developed the crucible steel technique
  • 1779 - Bry Higgins issued a patent for hydraulic cement (stucco) for use as an exterior plaster
  • 1799 - Alessandro Volta makes a copper/zinc acid battery

Nineteenth century

Twentieth century

  • 1902 - Auguste Verneuil develops the Verneuil process for making synthetic rubies
  • 1909 - Leo Baekeland presents Bakelite, a hard, thermosetting plastic
  • 1911 - Heike Kamerlingh Onnes discovers superconductivity
  • 1912 - Harry Brearley invents stainless steel
  • 1916 - Jan Czochralski invents a method for growing single crystals of metals
  • 1924 - Corning Glass Works scientists invent Pyrex, a glass with a very low coefficient of thermal expansion
  • 1931 - Julius Nieuwland develops the synthetic rubber called neoprene
  • 1931 - Wallace Carothers develops nylon
  • 1938 - Roy Plunkett discovers the process for making poly-tetrafluoroethylene, better known as teflon
  • 1947 - First germanium transistor invented
  • 1947 - First commercial application of a piezoelectric ceramic: barium titanate used as a phonograph needle
  • 1951 - Individual atoms seen for the first time, using the field ion microscope
  • 1953 - Karl Ziegler discovers metallic catalysts, allowing the production of polyethylene polymers with greatly improved strength
  • 1954 - Six percent efficiency silicon solar cells made at Bell Laboratories
  • 1959 - Pilkington Brothers patent the float glass process
  • 1962 - Invention of SQUID (superconducting quantum interference device)
  • 1968 - Liquid crystal display (LCD) developed by RCA
  • 1970 - Silica optical fibers grown by Corning Incorporated
  • 1970 - Invention of AOD (argon oxygen decarburization) refining
  • 1980 - Development of duplex stainless steels that resist oxidation in chlorides

See also

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Askeland, Donald R. and Pradeep P. Phulé (2005). The Science & Engineering of Materials, 5th edition, Thomson-Engineering. ISBN 0534553966. 
  • Eberhart, Mark (2003). Why Things Break: Understanding the World by the Way It Comes Apart. Harmony. ISBN 1400047609. 
  • Gaskell, David R. (1995). Introduction to the Thermodynamics of Materials, 4th edition, Taylor and Francis Publishing. ISBN 1560329920. 
  • Gordon, James Edward (1984). The New Science of Strong Materials or Why You Don't Fall Through the Floor, Reissue edition, Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691023808. 


External links

All links retrieved November 7, 2022.


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