Science of MaterialsExamines the evolution of this new scientific discipline. Deals with selected solid (engineering) materials while also describing asbestos, asphalt, natural gas, cellulose, wood, reeds, lignin, paper, liquid crystals, spinels, coal tar, and coal gas and petroleum. Considers such recent materials as glassy metals, sialons, and composite materials. Examines all important classes of properties of materials; fundamentals or molecular-level considerations; testing; and devices such as lasers, masers, computer memory chips, and several types of nuclear reactors. Plus, material that normally occur as liquids or gases are treated with the same attention as solids, and properties of materials are determined by their structures and interactions, stressing their common features. |
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Results 1-3 of 19
Page 218
... Aluminum is of course very light , has high thermal and electrical conductivities . It has good corrosion resistance due to the formation of an oxide layer on the surface . Such a solid layer , called by metallurgists coherent oxide ...
... Aluminum is of course very light , has high thermal and electrical conductivities . It has good corrosion resistance due to the formation of an oxide layer on the surface . Such a solid layer , called by metallurgists coherent oxide ...
Page 264
... aluminum is typically rather weak . Walrath and Adams solved the problem by producing a hybrid with satisfactory mechanical properties . Their composite consists of thin plies of epoxy - impregnated graphite fiber yarns pressed between ...
... aluminum is typically rather weak . Walrath and Adams solved the problem by producing a hybrid with satisfactory mechanical properties . Their composite consists of thin plies of epoxy - impregnated graphite fiber yarns pressed between ...
Page 384
... aluminum produces a protective coherent oxide layer , we notice that this metal is close to the top of the galvanic series . This means that in , say , a salt solution a freshly cut piece of aluminum will corrode ; it will get dissolved ...
... aluminum produces a protective coherent oxide layer , we notice that this metal is close to the top of the galvanic series . This means that in , say , a salt solution a freshly cut piece of aluminum will corrode ; it will get dissolved ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Metals and Alloys | 3 |
Mathematical Prelude | 9 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
alloys amorphous applied approach atoms azeotrope behavior binary boltzons bonds called carbon cementite ceramics chain chapter Chem chemical cm³ coal tar components composition consider constant containing corrosion critical point crystal crystalline curve defects defined density diagram dipole discussed in Section dislocation distance elastic electric electrical conductivity electrons energy entropy equations equilibrium example experimental fermions Figure force formula gases Gibbs function given glass graph hydrogen bonds ibid important instance interactions intermolecular involved ions kinds lattice layer lignin liquid phases liquid-vapor magnetic melting metal method mixture molecular molecules obtained oxide parameters particles partition function pearlite Phys polymer potential pressure problem produced quantities quantum radial distribution function reaction represents semiconductors shown in Fig solution statistical mechanics steel stress structure surface Swietoslawski temperature theory thermal thermodynamic thermodynamic entropy tion usually values virial coefficients viscoelastic volume