Engineering Materials and Their ApplicationsThis edition of the classic text/reference book has been updated and revised to provide balanced coverage of metals, ceramics, polymers and composites. The first five chapters assess the different structures of metals, ceramics and polymers and how stress and temperature affect them. Demonstrates how to optimize a material's structure by using equilibrium data (phase diagrams) and nonequilibrium conditions, especially precipitation hardening. Discusses the structures, characteristics and applications of the important materials in each field. Considers topics common to all materials--corrosion and oxidation, failure analysis, processing of electrical and magnetic materials, materials selection and specification. Contains special chapters on advanced and large volume engineering materials plus abundant examples and problems. |
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Page 492
... field is applied to a material , the motions of all the electrons change . This produces a local field around each electron . By a law of physics known as Lenz's law this field is in the opposite direction to the applied field and gives ...
... field is applied to a material , the motions of all the electrons change . This produces a local field around each electron . By a law of physics known as Lenz's law this field is in the opposite direction to the applied field and gives ...
Page 499
... field is increased , the domains in line with the field grow and the permeability is high . As the flux approaches satura- tion , the atomic magnets in the domains are practically all aligned and con- tributing to the high flux density ...
... field is increased , the domains in line with the field grow and the permeability is high . As the flux approaches satura- tion , the atomic magnets in the domains are practically all aligned and con- tributing to the high flux density ...
Page 507
... field . In ceramic magnets the inverse spinel structure is used to produce soft magnets of the desired characteristics . For hard magnets fine domain - sized particles of the magnetoplumbite structure are used . DEFINITIONS Permeability ...
... field . In ceramic magnets the inverse spinel structure is used to produce soft magnets of the desired characteristics . For hard magnets fine domain - sized particles of the magnetoplumbite structure are used . DEFINITIONS Permeability ...
Contents
A General View of the Problems | 9 |
Summary | 14 |
Summary | 45 |
Copyright | |
19 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Engineering Materials and Their Applications Richard Aloysius Flinn,Paul K. Trojan Snippet view - 1986 |
Engineering Materials and Their Applications Richard Aloysius Flinn,Paul K. Trojan Snippet view - 1975 |
Engineering Materials and Their Applications Richard Aloysius Flinn,Paul K. Trojan Snippet view - 1986 |
Common terms and phrases
alloys aluminum amount Annealed applied atoms austenite bonds Calculate called carbide carbon cast ceramics common composition conductivity consider contains cooling copper corrosion crystal curve density developed diagram diffusion direction discussed ductility effect elastic electrical electrons elements elongation energy engineering eutectoid example ferrite field final give given glass grain grain boundaries graphite hardening hardness heat higher important increases ions iron lead liquid load lower magnetic martensite material melt metal MN/m² mold molecules Note obtain occur pearlite percent percent carbon percentage phase plane plastic polymer position present produced properties quenched range reaction resistance result shape shown in Fig shows silicon solid solution steel strain strength stress structure surface Table temper temperature tensile transformation typical unit cell usually volume weight yield