Mechanical MetallurgyThis bestselling metallurgy text examines the behaviour of materials under stress and their reaction to a variety of hostile environments. It covers the entire scope of mechanical metallurgy, from an understanding of the continuum description of stress and strain, through crystalline and defect mechanisms of flow and fracture, and on to a consideration of major mechanical property tests and the basic metalworking process. It has been updated throughout, and optimised for metric (SI) units . End-of-chapter study questions are included. |
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Page xv
... first edition of Mechanical Metallurgy at least 25 textbooks dealing with major segments of the book have appeared in print . For example , at least 10 books dealing with the mechanics of metalworking have been published during this ...
... first edition of Mechanical Metallurgy at least 25 textbooks dealing with major segments of the book have appeared in print . For example , at least 10 books dealing with the mechanics of metalworking have been published during this ...
Page 106
... first two by the relation i = − ( h + k ) . The face - centered cubic and hexagonal close - packed structures can both be built up from a stacking of close - packed planes of spheres . Figure 4-4 shows that there are two ways in which ...
... first two by the relation i = − ( h + k ) . The face - centered cubic and hexagonal close - packed structures can both be built up from a stacking of close - packed planes of spheres . Figure 4-4 shows that there are two ways in which ...
Page 590
... first hot - working operation for most steel products is done on the primary roughing mill ( sometimes called blooming , slabbing , or cogging mills ) . These mills usually are two - high reversing mills with 0.6 to 1.4 m - diameter ...
... first hot - working operation for most steel products is done on the primary roughing mill ( sometimes called blooming , slabbing , or cogging mills ) . These mills usually are two - high reversing mills with 0.6 to 1.4 m - diameter ...
Contents
Introduction | 3 |
Stress and Strain Relationships for Elastic Behavior | 17 |
Metallurgical Fundamentals | 101 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
alloy aluminum angle annealed ASME ASTM atoms axis behavior billet brittle fracture Burgers vector cold-worked components compression constant crack creep cycles decrease determined diameter direction dislocation line ductile edge dislocation elastic elongation embrittlement energy engineering equation extrusion factor failure fatigue limit fibers Figure flow curve flow stress force forging friction given grain boundaries hot-working hydrostatic increase indentation lattice length load machining martensite material matrix maximum measured mechanical metallurgical Metals Park modulus necking notch occurs particles percent plane-strain plastic deformation plastic strain pressure produce properties ratio recrystallization reduction region residual stresses rolling screw dislocation shear stress sheet shown in Fig slip plane slip systems Society for Metals specimen steel strain hardening strain rate stress-strain curve structure surface temperature tensile strength tensile stress tensor thickness tool torsion Trans usually velocity workpiece yield strength yield stress York