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  • Article - 5 Jul 2013
    Titanium alloys have many good attributes such as superior corrosion resistance, very high tensile strength, and durability.
  • 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 - 30 Jul 2013
    Titanium alloys are of different types, namely, alpha alloys, near-alpha alloys, alpha and beta alloys and beta alloys.
  • 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 - 16 Jul 2013
    Cold-work tool steels are high carbon steels that are further classified into three subgroups - oil-hardening steels, air-hardening steels, and high-carbon, high-chromium steels, Oil-hardening...
  • Article - 16 Jul 2013
    Cold-work tool steels belong to the family of high carbon steels that are further classified into oil-hardening steels, high-carbon, high-chromium steels, and air-hardening steels. Oil-hardening...
  • Article - 13 Aug 2013
    Tungsten, a good carbide former, is a steel gray metal that increases temperature and red hardness, prevents gain growth and improves toughness of steels. Tungsten is used in high speed steels and hot...
  • Article - 10 Jul 2013
    Tungsten is a good carbide former that increases temperature and red hardness, prevents gain growth and improves toughness. It is a steel gray metal used in high speed steels and hot forming tool...
  • Article - 10 Jul 2013
    Chromium hot-work tool steels are designated as group H steels according to the AISI classification system. This series of steels start from H1 to H19. The most commonly used chromium hot-work steels...
  • Article - 9 Aug 2013
    Low alloy special purpose steels or group L steels contain small quantities of chromium, nickel, vanadium, and molybdenum. L2 and L6 form the group L steels.

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