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Nirmal K. Sinha
Engineering Physics of High-Temperature Materials
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Страница 1
Table of Contents
List of Tables
List of Illustrations
Guide
Pages
Engineering Physics of High‐Temperature Materials Metals, Ice, Rocks, and Ceramics
Страница 8
Страница 9
Acknowledgments
Engineering Physics of High‐Temperature Materials Preface
1 Importance of a Unified Model of High‐Temperature Material Behavior CHAPTER MENU
1.1 The World's Kitchens – The Innovation Centers for Materials Development
Trinity of Fire
Trinity of Civilization
1.1.1 Defining High Temperature Based on Cracking Characteristics
Trinity of Cracks
1.2 Trinities of Earth's Structure and Cryosphere
1.2.1 Trinity of Earth's Structure Trinity of Earth's Structure
1.2.2 Trinity of Earth's Cryospheric Regions
Trinity of Earth's Cryosphere
1.3 Earth's Natural Materials (Rocks and Ice)
1.3.1 Ice: A High‐Temperature Material
1.3.2 Ice: An Analog to Understand High‐Temperature Properties of Solids
1.4 Rationalization of Temperature: Low and High
1.5 Deglaciation and Earth's Response
Sea‐Level Change
Uses of Sea‐Level Changes
1.6 High‐Temperature Deformation: Time Dependency 1.6.1 Issues with Terminology: Elastic, Plastic, and Viscous Deformation
1.6.2 Elastic, Delayed Elastic, and Viscous Deformation
Trinity of Strain
Creep Trinity
1.7 Strength of Materials
1.8 Paradigm Shifts
1.8.1 Paradigm Shift in Experimental Approach
1.8.2 Breaking Tradition for Creep Testing
1.8.3 Exemplification of the Novel Approach
1.8.4 Romanticism for a Constant‐Structure Creep Test
References
2 Nature of Crystalline Substances for Engineering Applications CHAPTER MENU
Trinity of Properties
2.1 Basic Materials Classification Trinity of Classification
Trinity of States
2.2 Solid‐state Materials
2.2.1 Structure of Crystalline Solids
Trinity of Crystal Structure
2.2.2 Structure of Amorphous Solids
Trinity of Glass Structure Models
2.3 General Physical Principles 2.3.1 Solidification of Materials
2.3.2 Phase Diagrams
2.3.3 Crystal Imperfections
2.3.3.1 Point Defects
2.3.3.2 Line Defects/Dislocations
2.3.3.3 Planar Defects
2.3.3.4 Intragranular Precipitates
Trinity of Precipitate Classification
2.3.3.5 Boundary Defects
2.3.3.6 Bulk or Volume Defects
2.4 Glass and Glassy Phase
2.4.1 Glass Transition
2.4.2 Structure of Real Glass
2.4.3 Composition of Standard Glass
2.4.4 Thermal Tempering
2.4.5 Material Characteristics
2.5 Rocks: The Most Abundant Natural Polycrystalline Material Trinity of Rocks
2.5.1 Sedimentary Rocks
2.5.2 Metamorphic Rocks
2.5.3 Igneous Rocks
2.6 Ice: The Second Most Abundant Natural Polycrystalline Material
2.7 Ceramics
2.8 Metals and Alloys
2.8.1 Iron‐base Alloys
Trinity of Iron Phases
2.8.2 Nickel‐base Alloys
2.8.3 Titanium‐base Alloys
2.8.4 Mechanical Metallurgy
2.9 Classification of Solids Based on Mechanical Response at High Temperatures
Trinity of High‐Temperature Deformation Mechanisms
References
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