Studying Engineering Materials Recommended Textbook

AI Thread Summary
For a solid Engineering Materials textbook, "Materials Science and Engineering" by William Callister is highly recommended, known for its well-structured content covering the fundamentals of metals, ceramics, polymers, and composites. It has been a staple in many UK universities for over 20 years, with multiple versions available. Another notable recommendation is "Engineering Materials 1" by Ashby and Jones, which focuses more on mechanical properties like stress-strain curves and fracture mechanics. While textbooks provide foundational knowledge, for the latest industrial applications and current trends, online resources are suggested as they tend to be more up-to-date.
eurekameh
Messages
209
Reaction score
0
Can anyone recommend me a good Engineering Materials textbook? Here is the course description:

Introduces the physics and chemistry of engineering materials including metals, ceramics, polymers, and composites. Covers the relationships among the processing, internal structure, material properties, and applications. Internal structure includes crystal structure, imperfections, and phases. Processing includes annealing, precipitation hardening, and heat treatment of steel. Properties include mechanical properties and corrosion behavior. Also considers current industrial needs.

Thanks.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
eurekameh said:
Can anyone recommend me a good Engineering Materials textbook? Here is the course description:

Introduces the physics and chemistry of engineering materials including metals, ceramics, polymers, and composites. Covers the relationships among the processing, internal structure, material properties, and applications. Internal structure includes crystal structure, imperfections, and phases. Processing includes annealing, precipitation hardening, and heat treatment of steel. Properties include mechanical properties and corrosion behavior. Also considers current industrial needs.

Thanks.

I would have a look at Materials Science and Engineering by William Callister, find a preview of the ebook and see if you like it, I thought it was very well structured but probably not very in depth.
 
William Callister is the core materials science textbook at many unis in the UK.

He has written or co-written several versions of the Textbook, and it has been floating around for about 20 years so there should be plenty of old copies out there. All of them cover the same basics (I've got 2 variants myself - long story...). Shackelton is the other major one.

As to the "current industrial needs" bit, i don't know. If you mean that it looks at Type-II superconductors, then fine, but it all depends on how current you want to be. Personally, the internet is a much better place to find out this type of stuff. Textbooks are immediately out of date on this.

If you are looking for mechanics, "Engineering materials 1" by Ashby and Jones is the standard one we use (goes into stress-strain curves, dislocations in a bit more detail, creep, fracture, etc). It is just a bit more focused on the mechanical side. In saying that, Dartmouth put a really good old textbook online for this stuff

http://engineering.dartmouth.edu/defmech/

book mark it for life. it's a god-send.
 
After a year of thought, I decided to adjust my ratio for applying the US/EU(+UK) schools. I mostly focused on the US schools before, but things are getting complex and I found out that Europe is also a good place to study. I found some institutes that have professors with similar interests. But gaining the information is much harder than US schools (like you have to contact professors in advance etc). For your information, I have B.S. in engineering (low GPA: 3.2/4.0) in Asia - one SCI...
I graduated with a BSc in Physics in 2020. Since there were limited opportunities in my country (mostly teaching), I decided to improve my programming skills and began working in IT, first as a software engineer and later as a quality assurance engineer, where I’ve now spent about 3 years. While this career path has provided financial stability, I’ve realized that my excitement and passion aren’t really there, unlike what I felt when studying or doing research in physics. Working in IT...
Hello, I’m an undergraduate student pursuing degrees in both computer science and physics. I was wondering if anyone here has graduated with these degrees and applied to a physics graduate program. I’m curious about how graduate programs evaluated your applications. In addition, if I’m interested in doing research in quantum fields related to materials or computational physics, what kinds of undergraduate research experiences would be most valuable?
Back
Top