Search

Search Results
Results 17211 - 17220 of 17741 for Surfacing
  • Article - 12 Nov 2012
    Super alloys or high performance alloys have an ability to function at very high temperatures and mechanical stress, and also where high surface stability is required.
  • Article - 18 Dec 2012
    Super alloys or high performance alloys have an ability to function at temperatures above 540ºC(1000ºF) with deformation resistance and high surface stability. As they have good oxidation and creep...
  • Article - 15 Nov 2012
    Super alloys are metallic alloys that function at high temperature environment where high surface stability and deformation resistance are mainly required. Three major classification of super alloys...
  • Article - 20 Dec 2012
    Super alloys or high performance alloys are used at environments with very high temperature above 540ºC(1000ºF) where deformation resistance and high surface stability are chiefly required.
  • Article - 18 Dec 2012
    Super alloys or high performance alloys have an ability to function at temperatures above 540ºC(1000ºF) with deformation resistance and high surface stability.
  • Article - 14 Nov 2012
    Super alloys are metallic alloys used at high temperatures above 540ºC(1000ºF) where high surface stability and deformation resistance are mainly required. Three major classes of super alloys include...
  • Article - 20 Dec 2012
    Hafnium is a ductile, lustrous silver metal which can easily resist corrosion due to the presence of a tough, impenetrable oxide film on its surface. The metal has very high melting point, and remains...
  • Article - 17 Oct 2012
    The EVOQ triple quadrupole for liquid chromatography (LC-TQ) was designed for a singular purpose – to reliably quantify thousands of real samples in the fastest sample-to-report time possible.
  • Article - 20 Sep 2012
    Alloy or alloyed steels are defined by the ISO specification 4948/1 in the following manner. Alloy steels are those containing any element listed below in a quantity equal to or greater than the...
  • Article - 5 Sep 2012
    Ferrofluid sounds like a concept straight from a bad science-fiction film – a black, shape-shifting metallic liquid, that moves and forms spikes using magnetic fields.

While we only use edited and approved content for Azthena answers, it may on occasions provide incorrect responses. Please confirm any data provided with the related suppliers or authors. We do not provide medical advice, if you search for medical information you must always consult a medical professional before acting on any information provided.

Your questions, but not your email details will be shared with OpenAI and retained for 30 days in accordance with their privacy principles.

Please do not ask questions that use sensitive or confidential information.

Read the full Terms & Conditions.