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Results 1261 - 1270 of 1515 for Iron-carbon
  • Article - 30 Jul 2013
    MONEL is an alloy of nickel and copper, it was discovered by Robert Crooks Stanley in the year 1901. He named the alloy after the president of the International Nickel Company, Ambrose Monell.
  • Article - 5 Jul 2013
    Titanium alloys have several advantageous attributes that allow their use in industries like automobile, consumer electronics, military, aerospace, medical, marine, and sports equipment.
  • Article - 5 Jul 2013
    Titanium alloys have many good attributes that allow their use in varied industries such as consumer electronics, aerospace, medical, marine, military, automobile, and sports equipment. Their key...
  • Article - 24 Jul 2013
    Grade 11 Ti-0.15Pd alloy’s mechanical properties are known to be similar to commercially pure titanium grade 1. The main difference is the presence of palladium in grade 11. Palladium helps to enhance...
  • Article - 5 Jul 2013
    Grade 21 Ti 15Mo 2.7Nb 3Al 0.25Si alloy has improved oxidation resistance and creep strength. This alloy is resistant to aircraft hydraulic fluids at all temperatures, thus it is ideal for use in...
  • Article - 5 Jul 2013
    Grade 28 Ti-3Al-2.5V-0.1Ru alloy is a ruthenium-enhanced version of grade Ti-3Al-2.5V with similar physical and mechanical properties. Ruthenium provides this alloy with improved corrosion resistance.
  • Article - 9 Aug 2013
    Grade Ti 10V 2Fe 3Al alloy is a near-beta alloy that was mainly developed to suit airframe forging applications. This alloy has unique combination of excellent hot-die forgeability and excellent high...
  • Article - 24 Jul 2013
    Titanium alloys possess excellent corrosion resistance, very high tensile strength and toughness. Another added advantage is that they are light weight.
  • Article - 30 Jul 2013
    Titanium alloys possess a combination of mechanical properties and corrosion resistance coupled with low density, making them viable for several applications.
  • Article - 9 Aug 2013
    Titanium alloys are divided into four types, namely, alpha-phase, near-alpha phase, beta-phase, and alpha-beta-phase.

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