## What Is CTE?
CTE (alpha) is the fractional change in length per degree of temperature change, in 10^-6/degree C. A 1-meter steel bar (alpha = 12) heated by 100 degrees C expands 1.2 mm.
## CTE of Engineering Metals
| Metal/Alloy | CTE (10^-6/degree C) |
|------------|----------------------|
| Invar 36 (36% Ni) | 1.2 |
| Tungsten | 4.5 |
| Kovar (29Ni-17Co-Fe) | 5.3 |
| Carbon steel | 11-12 |
| Titanium Ti-6Al-4V | 8.6 |
| 304 Stainless | 17.3 |
| Copper | 17.0 |
| Aluminum 6061 | 23.6 |
| Magnesium AZ31B | 26.0 |
## CTE Mismatch: Thermal Stress
When two materials with different CTEs are bonded, temperature change creates differential expansion: sigma = E x delta-alpha x delta-T.
**Steel-to-aluminum joints**: CTE mismatch of 12 ppm/degree C. A 1-meter joint with 100 degree C change develops 1.2 mm differential expansion.
**Stainless-to-carbon steel welds**: Mismatch of ~6 ppm/degree C. Cyclic thermal stress at every startup and shutdown.
## Low-CTE Alloys
**Invar 36**: CTE 1.2 ppm/degree C via magnetovolume effect. Applications: LNG membrane tanks, precision instruments, optical benches, composite layup molds (matched CTE to carbon fiber).
**Kovar**: CTE 5.3 ppm/degree C, matching borosilicate glass. Used for hermetic glass-to-metal seals in electronics.
## Practical Implications
**Piping**: 30 m of stainless at 300 degrees C above ambient expands 15.6 mm. Expansion loops or bellows are mandatory.
**Bolted joints**: Aluminum flanges with steel bolts: temperature increase raises bolt tension (aluminum expands more). Temperature decrease can cause joint separation.
**Glass-to-metal seals**: CTE match must be within ~0.5 ppm/degree C. Kovar (5.3) matched to borosilicate (5.0).
**Bimetallic thermostats**: Deliberately exploit CTE mismatch. Invar (low CTE) bonded to brass (high CTE) bends with temperature change to actuate switches.
## Temperature Dependence
CTE generally increases with temperature. Design calculations must use the mean CTE over the actual operating range, not the room-temperature value. Invar loses its anomaly above the Curie temperature (~200 degrees C), where CTE jumps to 10+ ppm/degree C.
Coefficient of Thermal Expansion in Metals
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The coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) determines how much a metal expands with temperature changes. CTE mismatch between joined materials causes thermal stress, distortion, and fatigue in multi-material assemblies.
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