Elements of X-ray DiffractionThis is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book. |
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Page 259
... material . If the aggregate contains more than one phase , its properties naturally depend on the properties of each phase considered separately and on the way these phases occur in the aggregate . Such a material offers wide structural ...
... material . If the aggregate contains more than one phase , its properties naturally depend on the properties of each phase considered separately and on the way these phases occur in the aggregate . Such a material offers wide structural ...
Page 270
... material below that layer . These circumstances naturally pose the following question : what is the effective depth of x - ray penetration ? Or , stated in a more useful manner , to what depth of the specimen does the information in ...
... material below that layer . These circumstances naturally pose the following question : what is the effective depth of x - ray penetration ? Or , stated in a more useful manner , to what depth of the specimen does the information in ...
Page 387
... material . Detection and identification of such deposits is usually an easy matter if the metal object is examined directly by some reflection method of diffraction , without making any attempt to remove the surface deposit for separate ...
... material . Detection and identification of such deposits is usually an easy matter if the metal object is examined directly by some reflection method of diffraction , without making any attempt to remove the surface deposit for separate ...
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Common terms and phrases
absorption coefficient absorption edge alloy analysis angle atomic number austenite axis back-reflection Bragg angle Bragg law Bravais lattice calculated camera chart circle composition constant copper atoms cosĀ² counter cubic curve Debye ring Debye-Scherrer decreases determined diffracted beam diffraction lines diffraction pattern diffractometer direction distance electrons elements equation error example face-centered face-centered cubic factor film fluorescent fluorescent radiation given grain hexagonal incident beam indices integrated intensity lattice parameter Laue method martensite measured metal normal obtained Orthorhombic parallel percent phase photograph pinhole plotted pole figure position powder pattern preferred orientation projection reciprocal lattice reciprocal-lattice reflecting planes relative residual stress rhombohedral rotation sample scattering shown in Fig sinĀ² slit solid solution spacing specimen spectrometer sphere spot stereographic substance surface temperature tetragonal thickness tion transmission unit cell values vector voltage wavelength x-ray diffraction x-ray method x-ray tube zero zone