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Results 471 - 480 of 539 for High strength low alloy steel
  • 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 - 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 is a lustrous metal with a silver color, low density and high strength. It is as strong as steel and twice as strong as aluminum. When it is alloyed with other metals such as nickel,...
  • Article - 8 Jul 2013
    Titanium alloys contain titanium and other chemical elements such as molybdenum, aluminum, vanadium, and iron.
  • Article - 3 Jul 2013
    Nickel 270 alloy is a high purity nickel alloy that has high ductility and low base hardness. It is made by powder metallurgy. It contains 99.95% nickel in addition to traces of minor elements.
  • Article - 18 Jun 2013
    Alloy steel is often subdivided into low alloy steel and high alloy steels. Low alloy steels exhibit mechanical properties superior to plain carbon steels due to the addition of alloying elements such...
  • Article - 21 Jun 2013
    The carbon content in tool steels may range from as low as 0.1% to as high as more than 1.6%, and many are alloyed with alloying elements such as vanadium, molybdenum and chromium.
  • Article - 31 Jul 2013
    The two main properties of precipitation-hardened stainless steels are high corrosion resistance and high strength. Stainless steel grade 17-7 PH is a precipitation hardened stainless steel that...
  • Article - 10 Jul 2013
    The presence of large amounts of chromium in stainless steel alloys is what provides it the high level of corrosion resistance than other steels. Stainless steels are classified into martensitic,...
  • Article - 18 Jun 2013
    Stainless steels are called as high-alloy steels. Due to the presence of large amounts of chromium in the range of 4 to 30%, they have high corrosion resistance than other steels.

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