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Results 201 - 210 of 233 for Weldability
  • Article - 5 Jul 2013
    Commercially pure titanium alloys are of many types. The content of oxygen and iron influence their mechanical properties. Each commercial grade is designed to meet the needs for different...
  • Article - 5 Jul 2013
    Commercially pure titanium alloys contain small amounts of oxygen and iron that influence its mechanical properties. Each commercial grade is produced to provide properties suited for different...
  • Article - 5 Jul 2013
    The mechanical properties of commercially pure titanium alloys are influenced the presence of small amounts of oxygen and iron. Grade 1 unalloyed Ti ("Pure") 35A alloy contains the lowest oxygen and...
  • Article - 5 Jul 2013
    Titanium alloys are divided into alpha alloys, near-alpha alloys, alpha and beta alloys, and beta alloys. Grade Ti 15V 3Cr 3Al 3Sn alloy is a beta alloy that can be strip-rolled and heat-treated. It...
  • 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 - 9 Aug 2013
    Titanium alloys are divided into four types, namely, alpha-phase, near-alpha phase, beta-phase, and alpha-beta-phase.
  • Article - 9 Aug 2013
    Titanium alloys possess very good corrosion resistance, high tensile strength and toughness. They are also light weight. Grade Ti 6Al 2Nb 1Ta 1Mo alloy is a near alpha wrought alloy.
  • Article - 30 Jul 2013
    Titanium alloys are divided into three types, namely, alpha-phase, beta-phase, and alpha-beta-phase. Grade 23 Ti 6Al 4V ELI alloy is an alpha-beta wrought alloy. The ELI stands for extra low...
  • Article - 8 Jul 2013
    Titanium mixed with other chemical elements such as molybdenum, aluminum, nickel, and zirconium produces a wide range of titanium alloys.
  • Article - 30 Jul 2013
    There are many types of titanium alloys available in the market today. They fall under four categories, namely, alpha alloys, near-alpha alloys, alpha and beta alloys, and beta alloys. These alloys...

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