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A detailed illustration of materials engineering concepts, focusing on sustainable design, thermal properties, and magnetism, with visual elements like diagrams and charts.

Understanding Material Engineering: A Quiz

Test your knowledge on material engineering concepts with this engaging quiz! Discover various aspects related to materials, their properties, design, and sustainability.

Features of the quiz include:

  • Multiple choice and text questions
  • Questions covering thermal properties, magnetism, and sustainability
  • Suitable for students, teachers, and professionals in the field
26 Questions6 MinutesCreated by CraftingSteel29
Three factors that which affect the cost of a product that the material engineer has control over
Is the specification of size, shape, and configuration, which will affect in-service component performance?
Component design
Materials
Manufacturing technique
Represents the ability to maintain an acceptable lifestyle at the present level and into the indefinite future while preserving the environment?
Also known as sustainable design or environmentally friendly design, refers to the practice of creating products, buildings, and systems that minimize their negative impact on the environment and promote sustainability.
Are substances that can be decomposed by microorganisms.
Are substances that cannot be broken down by living organisms rather leading to pollution.
Means that a material, after completing its life cycle in one component, could be reprocessed, could re-enter the materials cycle, and could be reused in another component
This is a property of a material wherein, the material's form changes when heat is applied.
A. Thermal properties
B. Heat capacity
C. Thermal expansion
D. Thermal conductivity
It is a stress brought on to a material by any change in temperature.
A. Chronic stress
B. Heat stress
C. Thermal stress
D. Cold stress
These are the three dimensions of thermal expansion.
A. Linear Expansion, Area Expansion, Volt Expansion
B. Area Expansion, Linear Expansion, Volume Expansion
C. Domain Expansion, Heat Expansion, Linear Expansion
D. Concentration Expansion, Integration Expansion, Diverse Expansion
The response of a material whether it is a solid body, a liquid, or a gas when heat is applied.
A. Heat capacity
B. Thermal expansion
C. Thermal properties
D. Thermal stress
The quantity of heat required to produce a unit rise in temperature for 1 mole of a substance.
A. Heat capacity
B. Thermal properties
C. thermostat
D. Heat stress
A material's capacity to transfer heat through itself.
A. Thermal Expansion
B. Thermal Conductivity
C. Thermal Properties
D. Thermal Stress
A single quantum of vibration is called
Is the fracture of a body resulting from thermal stresses induced by rapid temperature changes.
Is a phenomenon by which materials assert an attractive or repulsive force or influence on other materials.
B, represents the internal field strength of a substance under influence of field H. The unit for this field vector is tesla
Is the phenomenon where atoms are coupled with other atoms that are not ferromagnetic, resulting in spin moments opposing each other.
Occurs when the B field diminishes faster than the applied H field, resulting in a residual B field at point R, indicating zero H field.
Is the product of a solenoid (a magnetic field-generator by means of cylindrical coil) with N turns and magnitude I divided by the length l of the solenoid.
A property of a specific medium through which the field H passes and in which B is measured.
Is a nonpermanent type of magnetism present only while an external field is being applied, particularly when there is a change in the orbital motion of electrons.
Refers to dipoles preferentially aligning parallel to the direction of an external field should there be a presence of a magnetic field, inducing magnetic moments to once free-rotating magnetic dipoles due to the absence of cancellation of spin or orbital magnetic moments.
Refers to the magnitude of maximum possible magnetization should all atoms align accordingly with the magnetic field.
Are normally used for secondary memory because they are capable of storing larger quantities of information and at a lower cost;
-This are metals that offer no resistance to electric current
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