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Results 501 - 510 of 634 for Applications requiring higher heat resistance
  • Article - 7 Nov 2001
    This grade combines high hardness and strength after suitable heat treatment. Corrosion and heat resistance are similar to grade 304. It is suited to production of long shafts which require no...
  • Article - 7 Nov 2001
    904L is a low carbon, high alloy austenitic stainless steel. It has excellent formability, weldability and toughness. It has good resistance to reducing acids as well as chloride attack. Typical...
  • Article - 26 Oct 2001
    Grade 430 is a non-hardenable grade that combines good corrosion resistance, formability and useful mechanical properties. It is resistant to nitric acid making it useful in the chemical industry, but...
  • Article - 23 Oct 2001
    420 is a higher carbon version of grade 410. When fully hardened it is the hardest of this family of stainless steels. Hardness is optimised at the expense of other properties. Typical applications...
  • Article - 19 Oct 2001
    301 stainless steel is an austenitic grade that can be supplied in various hardness and strengths. It also has variants with low carbon and high nitrogen. Applications include railway car structural...
  • Article - 19 Oct 2001
    2205 is the most widely used duplex (ferritic/austenitic) stainless steel grade. Its most important properties are excellent corrosion resistance and high strength. Applications include chemical...
  • Article - 11 Oct 2001
    Superconductivity is defined and the conditions necessary for materials to become superconducting are outlined. The differences between high temperature and low temperature superconductors are also...
  • Article - 9 Oct 2001
    Metallic powders are good absorbers of microwaves and can be sintered by microwave radiation. Processing in this way has advantages over conventional methods including faster and more energy efficient...
  • Article - 27 Sep 2001
    Adding nanosized particles to polymers can enhance properties such as strength, modulus, thermal stability as well as decreasing gas permeability. Properties such as toughness and impact resistance...
  • Article - 25 Sep 2001
    Silicones are polymers with a Si-O-Si backbone. There are different types depending on functional groups in the structure and curing mechanisms. Key properties include thermal stability, chemical...

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