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Results 4651 - 4660 of 5149 for copper
  • Article - 2 Aug 2013
    Magnesium is the sixth most abundant metal available on the earth’s crust. It is silvery white in appearance and is the lightest metal. It is usually alloyed with metals like aluminum, copper, zinc,...
  • Article - 29 Apr 2013
    Ferrography is an analytical technique that has been widely applied to understand the process of machine wear since the 1970s. Today, analytical ferrography is one of the most powerful diagnostic...
  • Article - 5 Aug 2013
    Magnesium alloys are mixtures of magnesium with other metals such as zinc, aluminium, manganese, silicon, copper, rare earths and zirconium.
  • Article - 18 Apr 2013
    Unlike natural diamonds which are created by geological processes over several thousands of years, synthetic diamonds are created within weeks in a laboratory using an artificial process.
  • Article - 20 Aug 2013
    Mercury (II) iodide is a chemical compound that exists in red-orange crystals. It is highly reactive to lead salts, iodoform, chlorides, light, heat, hydrogen peroxides and copper salts. Unlike...
  • Article - 7 Mar 2013
    Stainless steel grade F55 has excellent corrosion resistance to a wide range of areas, especially resistance to pitting and crevice corrosion in seawater and other chloride containing environments,...
  • Article - 7 Mar 2013
    Stainless steel 404 has excellent corrosion resistance owing to the presence of copper and chromium in its composition. Therefore, it is increasingly replacing 304 steel in many applications.
  • Article - 5 Mar 2013
    Stainless steel 332 is a nickel and chromium austenitic stainless steel designed with resistance against carburization and oxidation at elevated temperatures.
  • Article - 28 Feb 2013
    Grade 201 is a cheaper alternative to the traditional Cr-Ni austenitic stainless steels such as grade 304. Grade 201LN stainless steel has good resistance to oxidation, easy fabrication, and excellent...
  • Article - 12 Feb 2013
    In this interview, Dr. Allen Clauss, Vice President of R&D for Xolve, Inc., talks to AZoM regarding Xolve’s use of graphene and other nanomaterials to improve a wide array of polymer composites.

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