Mechanical Alloying
For Fabrication of Advanced Engineering Materials
- 1st Edition - June 26, 2001
- Author: M. Sherif El-Eskandarany
- Language: English
- Paperback ISBN:9 7 8 - 1 - 4 5 5 7 - 2 5 6 1 - 8
- eBook ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 0 9 4 6 8 8 - 7
- eBook ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 8 1 5 5 - 1 8 2 4 - 2
Unique in bringing about a solid-state reaction at room temperature, mechanical alloying produces powders and compounds difficult or impossible to obtain by conventional… Read more

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Request a sales quoteUnique in bringing about a solid-state reaction at room temperature, mechanical alloying produces powders and compounds difficult or impossible to obtain by conventional techniques. Immediate and cost-effective industry applications of the resultant advanced materials are in cutting tools and high performance aerospace products such as metal matrix armor and turbine blades. The book is a guided introduction to mechanical alloying, covering material requirements equipment, processing, and engineering properties and characteristics of the milled powders. Chapters 3 and 4 treat the fabrication of nanophase materials and nanophase composite materials. Chapter 8 provides extensive coverage of metallic glass substances.This book is ideal for materials scientists in industry and in research, design, processing, and plant engineers in the cutting tools and aerospace industries as well as senior level students in metallurgical and mechanical materials engineering. The book will especially benefit metallurgists unacquainted with ball milling fabrication.
Metallurgists, materials scientists and engineers, process and production engineers, industrial and academic libraries.
1 Introduction 1.1 BACKGROUND 1.2 HISTORY OF STORY OF MECHANICAL ALLOYING 1.3 MILLING 1.4 MECHANISM OF MECHANICAL ALLOYING 1.5 NECESSITY OF MECHANICAL ALLOYING2 Fabrication of ODS Alloys 2.1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND 2.2 APPLICATIONS AND EXAMPLES3 Fabrication of Nanophase Materials 3.1 INTRODUCTION 3.2 INFLUENCE OF NANOCRYSTALLINITY ON MECHANICAL PROPERTIES: STRENGTHENING BY GRAIN SIZE REDUCTION 3.3 FORMATION OF NANOCRYSTALLINE MATERIALS BY BALL MILLING TECHNIQUE 3.4 CONSOLIDATION OF THE NANOCRYSTALLINE MILLED POWDERS 4 Fabrication of Nanocomposite Materials 4.1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND 4.2 FABRICATION OF SiCp/Al COMPOSITES BY MECHANICAL SOLID STATE MIXING 4.3 PROPERTIES OF MECHANICALLY SOLID-STATE FABRICATED SiCp/Al COMPOSITES 4.4 MECHANISM OF FABRICATION5 Mechanically Induced Solid State Carbonization 5.1 INTRODUCTION 5.2 DIFFICULTIES OF PREPARATIONS 5.3 FABRICATION OF NANOCRYSTALLINE TiC BY MECHANICAL ALLOYING METHOD 5.4 PROPERTIES OF MECHANICALLY SOLID-STATE REACTED TiC POWDERS 5.5 OTHER CARBIDES PRODUCED BY MECHANICAL ALLOYING 6 Mechanically Induced Gas-Solid Reaction 6.1 INTRODUCTION 6.2 FABRICATION OF NANOCRYSTALLINE TiN BY REACTIVE BALL MILLING 6.3 PROPERTIES OF REACTED BALL MILLED TiN POWDERS 6.4 MECHANISM OF FABRICATION 6.5 OTHER NITRIDES PRODUCED BY RBM 6.6 FABRICATION OF NANOCRYSTALLINE SOLID SOLUTION NiTiH BY REACTIVE BALL MILLING7 Mechanically Induced Solid-State Reduction .................... 118 7.1 INTRODUCTION 7.2 REDUCTION OF Cu2O WITH Ti BY ROOM TEMPERATURE ROD MILLING 7.3 PROPERTIES OF ROD MILLED POWDERS 7.4 MECHANISM OF MSSR 7.5 FABRICATION OF NANOCRYSTALLINE WC AND NANOCOMPOSITE WC-MgO REFRACTORY MATERIALS BY MSSR METHOD8 Mechanically Induced Solid-State Amorphization 8.1 INTRODUCTION 8.2 FABRICATION OF AMORPHOUS ALLOYS BY MECHANICAL ALLOYING PROCESS 8.3 CRYSTAL-TO-GLASS TRANSITION 8.4 MECHANISM OF AMORPHIZATION BY MECHANICAL ALLOYING PROCESS 8.5 THE GLASS-FORMING RANGE 8.6 AMORPHIZATION VIA MECHANICAL ALLOYING WHEN -Hfor = ZERO; MECHANICAL SOLID-STATE AMORPHIZATION OF Fe50W50 BINARY SYSTEM 8.7 SPECIAL SYSTEMS AND APPLICATIONS 8.8 DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MECHANICAL ALLOYING AND MECHANICAL DISORDERING IN THE AMORPHIZATION REACTION OF Al50Ta50 IN A ROD MILL 8.9 MECHANICALLY-INDUCED CYCLIC CRYSTALLINEAMORPHOUS TRANSFORMATIONS DURING MECHANICAL ALLOYING Index
- No. of pages: 257
- Language: English
- Edition: 1
- Published: June 26, 2001
- Imprint: William Andrew
- Paperback ISBN: 9781455725618
- eBook ISBN: 9780080946887
- eBook ISBN: 9780815518242
ME
M. Sherif El-Eskandarany
A full Professor of Materials Science and Nanotechnology gained his Master and Doctor Degrees at Tohoku University, Japan. He worked as a Professor at Institute for Materials Research, Tohoku University, Japan, Professor at Faculty of Engineering, Al-Azhar University, Egypt. Until 2007, he worked as First-Under-Secretary of Egyptian Minster of Higher Education and Scientific Research, and the former Vice-President of The Academy of Scientific Research and Technology of Egypt. He has joined Kuwait Institute for Scientific Research to work as Senior Research Scientist in 2007. Since then, he works as Senior Research Scientist and Program Manager of Nanotechnology and Advanced Materials. He is the founder of Nanotechnology and Advanced Materials of KISR and the Project Leader of Establishing Nanotechnology Center in Kuwait. In 2018, he promoted to Principle Research Scientist. He has published more than 280 peer-reviewed papers in high-cited international scientific journals in the field of materials science, nanoscience and nanotechnology and more than 250 papers in the proceedings of several international conferences. He awarded six patents from the United States Patent and Trademark Office in the area of nanomaterials, protective coating and hydrogen storage nanocomposites. He is the author of six scientific books and received many national and international awards, two of them given by the His Excellency the Former Egyptian President and the other one given by His Highness The Prince of Kuwait.
Affiliations and expertise
Al Azhar University, Cairo, EgyptRead Mechanical Alloying on ScienceDirect