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  • Article - 6 Aug 2013
    NILO is a binary alloy of nickel-iron, in which the amount if nickel is varied. NILO 48 alloys are categorized as controlled-expansion alloys.
  • Article - 7 Aug 2013
    NILO is a binary alloy of nickel-iron, containing varying amounts of nickel. NILO is known as a controlled-expansion alloy. Controlled expansion alloys are characterized by low expansion coefficient...
  • Article - 17 May 2013
    Copper and its alloys possess excellent electrical and thermal properties coupled with good resistance to corrosion and high ductility. They are also relatively inexpensive.
  • Article - 18 Jul 2013
    Copper can be combined with other metals such as tin, silver, chromium, and zinc to make alloys. Copper and its alloys are essential materials in most of the electrical applications.
  • Article - 26 Jul 2013
    Copper alloys are metal alloys that have the metal copper as their chief component. There are about 400 types of copper alloys. A Unified Numbering System (UNS) has been developed for metals and...
  • Article - 14 Aug 2013
    Iron disulfide is a chemical compound with the chemical formula FeS2. It has a cubic structure which is among the first crystal structures solved by X-ray diffraction.
  • Article - 17 Dec 2012
    Rutherfordium was first discovered by a team of scientists led by Georgy Flerov at the Russian Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR) in Dubna in 1964 while bombarding plutonium atoms with neon.
  • Article - 18 Dec 2012
    Xenon was discovered on July 12, 1898, by an English chemist Morris Travers and a Scottish chemist Sir William Ramsay. Xenon was discovered during the study of liquefied air. This element was first...
  • Article - 17 Dec 2012
    With an aim to discover the missing noble gases other than argon and helium in the periodic table Morris M. Travers, an English chemist and Sir William Ramsay, a Scottish chemist studied liquefied air...
  • Article - 12 Dec 2012
    Argon was discovered by a Scottish chemist, Sir William Ramsay and an English chemist, Lord Rayleigh in 1894.

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