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Download Polymers composed of a large number of repeating units. Isomers
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Polymers composed of a large number of repeating units. Isomers molecules with the same molecular formula but different chemical structures. Malleable can be hammered or pressed permanently out of shape without breakin Ceramic materials Composite strong, stiff, brittle, and non-conductors of heat and electricity, materials made from two or more constituent materials Vacancy the interchange an adjacent vacant lattice site Frenkel defects in the lattice, of an atom from a normal different structural modifications of an element Amorphous mineral having no real or apparent crystalline form Crystallites position to occur due to thermal vibrations when an atom or cation leaves its place Allotropes Polymorphism or crystal structure. lattice ability of a solid material to exist in more than one form microscopic crystals that held together through highly defective boundaries Van der Waals forces holds molecules together in crystals 10.5% Chromium plus steel the resultant alloy is classified as "stainless steel". Vanadium Steel lighter, stronger, and more durable than other types of steel alloys. Molybdenum steel stronger and harder, and highly resistant to heat and corrosion. Magnesium alloys high strength-weight ratios, excellent machinability, and relatively low cost on a piece basis. Silicon steel high electrical resistance, improves the ability of magnetic fields to penetrate it, and reduces the steel’s hysteresis loss. Beryllium rigid, resists corrosion, and has a high melting point. Neodymium used to make very powerful magnets beacause of its high coercivity Yttrium used to remove impurities, Crystalline matter with particles arranged in a regular, 3D, repeating pattern. Amorphous metal with a disordered atomic structure Soaking the process of subjecting glass to a steady temperature Case hardening process for hardening steel that only affects the exterior of the steel. Carburizing process that adds carbon to the surface of metal that has a low carbon content to increase the hardness of the metal. Muntz metal comprised of about 60 percent copper and about 40 percent zinc. Monel needs to be turned and worked at slow speeds and low feed rates. It is resistant to corrosion and acids and hardens very quickly. Miller indices notation system in crystallography for planes in crystal lattices. Schottky defect two oppositely charged ions leave their normal lattice positions forming two vacancies in the lattice structure. Corrosion process of deterioration after exposure to the elements. Oxidation interaction between oxygen molecules and other substances. Elastic limit deforms. upper limit for the stress that can be applied to a material before it permanently Yield point point at which there is an appreciable deformation of the material without any corresponding increases of load. Ultimate tensile strength (UTS) maximum resistance that a material has to being fractured Stress ratio of applied load to the area of an element in tension Strain measure of the deformation of the material that is dimensionless. Proportional limit the greatest stress at which a material is capable ofsustaining the applied load without deviating from the proportionality of stress to strain. Elastic limit point on the stress-strain curve beyond which the material permanently deforms after removing the load . Yield strength point at which material exceeds the elastic limit and will not return to its origin shape or length if the stress is removed. Poisson's ratio ratio of the lateral to longitudinal strain is Poisson's ratio. Torque\moment of force the tendency of a force to rotate an object about an axis Bending moment the average internal stress induced in a structural element when an external force or moment is applied to the element causing the element to bend Axial force acts directly on an object's center axis. Axial load load that creates a force parallel to the axis of an object. Nickel plating process that deposits a thin layer of nickel onto an underlying metal. Specific modulus is a materials property consisting of the elastic modulus per mass density of a material. Covalent bond sharing of electron pairs between atoms Tangent modulus of elasticity the slope of the stress-strain diagram at any point. Secant modulus of elasticity strain. stress divided by strain at any given value of stress or Modulus of resilience applied. Phosphorus maximum elastic energy absorbed by a material when a load is needed to improve the ductility of nickel Pyroelectricity ability to generate a temporary voltage when heated or cooled Ferroelectricity property of certain materials that have a spontaneous electric polarization that can be reversed by the application of an external electric field. Hypoeutectiod steel having below the 0.8% carban and Hypereutectiod steel having above the 0.8% carbon Bainite acicular microstructure that forms in steels at temperatures of 250–550 °C Cavitation formation of vapour cavities or bubbles in a liquid by means of mechanical force Metal Matrix composites with at least two constituent parts, one being a metal. Polymer-matrix composites made from a polymer resin and are valued in the aerospace industry for their stiffness, lightness, and heat resistance. Ceramic Matrix strength of metal. composites that combines the heat resistance of ceramics with the Fatigue strength maximum stress a material can endure for a given number of stress cycles or cyclic load without breaking. Rupture strenght measure of the force necessary to break a given substance across Point defect missing of the atoms in the crystal, from the lattice site. German/Nickel silver Cemented carbide Martensite alloys of copper, zinc, and nickel, also called widia, is a hard material used in machining tough materials refers to a very hard form of stainless steel crystalline structure, Ferrite or alpha iron materials science term for pure iron, with a BCC crystal structure. Austenitic steels have austenite or gamma phase iron as their primary phase (FCC crystal). Ferritic and Martensitic stainless steels are magnetic. Austenitic stainless steels are non-magnetic. Isoelectronic equal numbers of electrons or the same electronic configuration. Copolymer A polymer derived from more than one species of monomer. A thermoplastic is a material which becomes soft when heated and hard when cooled.Thermoplastic materials can be cooled and heated several times. THERMOSETTING. : capable of becoming permanently rigid when heated or cured The Fermi energy is the maximum energy occupied by an electron at 0K. Bending stress is the normal stress that is induced at a point in a body subjected to loads that cause it to bend. When a load is applied perpendicular to the length of a beam (with two supports on each end), bending moments are induced in the beam. Stress corrosion cracking (SCC) is the growth of cracks in a corrosive environment Galvanic corrosion is an electrochemical process in which one metal corrodes preferentially to another when both metals are in electrical contact and immersed in an electrolyte. Localized corrosion is defined as the selective removal of metal by corrosion at small areas or zones on a metal surface in contact with a corrosive environment, Chloride stress corrosion corrosion in stainless alloys occurs in neutral-to-acid solutions with chloride or ions containing chlorine An edge dislocation is a defect where an extra half-plane of atoms is introduced mid way through the crystal, distorting nearby planes of atoms. A screw dislocation is much harder to visualize. Imagine cutting a crystal along a plane and slipping one half across the other by a lattice vector, the halves fitting back together without leaving a defect. In many materials, dislocations are found where the line direction and Burgers vector are neither perpendicular nor parallel and these dislocations are called mixed dislocations, consisting of both screw and edge characte Dislocations can decompose into partial dislocations in order to facilitate movement through a crystal lattice. in a coordinate system with axes , the stress tensor is a diagonal matrix, and has only the three normal components the principal stresses. If the three eigenvalues are equal, the stress is an isotropic compression or tension, always perpendicular to any surface; there is no shear stress, and the tensor is a diagonal matrix in any coordinate frame. quenching is the rapid cooling of a workpiece to obtain certain material properties. . Full annealing is accomplished by heating a hypoeutectoid steel to a temperature above the UCT (Upper Critical Temperature). Annealing is the process of bringing a piece of steel up to its critical temperature, and then letting it cool very, very slowly (many hours to cool to room temperature). Burgers vector the quantity needed to closed a circuit around a crystalline dislocations Poynting vector represents the directional energy flux density (the rate of energy transfer per unit area, in watts per square metre (W·m−2)) of an electromagnetic field. Grain structure arrangement of grain in metals polymorphism is the ability of a solid material to exist in more than one form or crystal structure. Isomerism the phenomenon whereby two or more polymer molecules or mer units have the same composition but different structural arrangements and properties. interstitial solid solution a solid solution wherein relatively small solute atoms occupy interstitial positions between the solvent or host atoms. Substitutional solid solution strengthening occurs when the solute atom is large enough that it can replace solvent atoms in their lattice positions. diamagnetism a weak form of induced or nonpermanent magnetism for which the magnetic susceptibility is negative. ferrimagnetism permanent and large magnetizations found in some ceramic materials; it results from antiparallel spin coupling and incomplete magnetic moment cancellation. antiferromagnetism a phenomenon where complete magnetic moment cancellation occurs as a result of antiparallel coupling of adjacent atoms or ions; the macroscopic solid possesses no net magnetic moment. isotactic Materials Science and Engineering Dictionary a type of polymer chain configuration where all side groups are positioned on the same side of the chain molecule. atactic Materials Science and Engineering Dictionary a type of polymer chain configuration where side groups are randomly positioned on one side of the chain or the other. viscosity Materials Science and Engineering Dictionary coefficient of resistance to flow Cassiterite chief tin ore Bauxite is an aluminium ore Galena lead ore Ilmenite is a weakly magnetic titanium-iron oxide mineral which is iron-black or steel-gray. Sphalerite zinc ore alloy Materials Science and Engineering Dictionary a metallic substance that is composed of two or more elements. extrusion Materials Science and Engineering Dictionary a forming technique whereby a material is forced, by compression, through a die orifice. Thermoforming is a manufacturing process where a plastic sheet is heated to a pliable forming temperature, formed to a specific shape in a mold Lithography is a method of printing originally based on the fundamental antipathy of oil and water. The bulk modulus of a substance measures the substance's resistance to uniform compression Volume Stress The stress that occurs in a material when it is subjected to compression from all sides. Volumetric strain is the ratio of change in volume to the original volume. Monel metal A nickel-copper alloy with high fatigue strength and excellent corrosion resistance in a range of media Nichrome is a 80% nickel and 20% chromium non-magnetic alloy usually used as a resistance wire. Patented in 1905, it is the oldest documented form of resistance heating alloy The resulting strain in the three directions would be the principal strains. The three-moment equation is widely used in finding the reactions in a continuous beam.