04982nam 2200613Ia 450 991100683530332120200520144314.01-282-71174-11-282-01119-70-08-094688-70-8155-1824-2(CKB)111056552538552(EBL)421154(OCoLC)437108139(SSID)ssj0000072495(PQKBManifestationID)11110315(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000072495(PQKBWorkID)10095428(PQKB)10254268(MiAaPQ)EBC421154(EXLCZ)9911105655253855220010503d2001 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrMechanical alloying for fabrication of advanced engineering materials /by M. Sherif El-EskandaranyNorwich, N.Y. Noyes Publications/W. Anderew Pub.c20011 online resource (259 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-8155-1462-X Includes bibliographical references and index.Front Cover; Mechanical Alloying for Fabrication of Advanced Engineering Materials; Copyright Page; Preface; Dedication; Acknowledgment; Table of Contents; Chapter 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 ALLOYING; REFERENCES; Chapter 2.Fabrication of ODS Alloys; 2.1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND; 2.2 APPLICATIONS AND EXAMPLES; REFERENCES; Chapter 3.Fabrication of Nanophase Materials; 3.1 INTRODUCTION3.2 INFLUENCE OF NANOCRYSTALLINITY ON MECHANICAL PROPERTIES: STRENGTHENING BY GRAIN SIZE REDUCTION3.3 FORMATION OF NANOCRYSTALLINE MATERIALS BY BALL MILLING TECHNIQUE; 3.4 CONSOLIDATION OF THE NANOCRYSTALLINE MILLED POWDERS; REFERENCES; Chapter 4.Fabrication of Nanocomposite Materials; 4.1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND; 4.2 FABRICATION OF SiCp/A1 COMPOSITES BY MECHANICAL SOLID STATE MIXING; 4.3 PROPERTIES OF MECHANICALLY SOLID-STATE FABRICATED SiCp/A1 COMPOSITES; 4.4 MECHANISM OF FABRICATION; REFERENCES; Chapter 5.Mechanically Induced Solid State Carbonization; 5.1 INTRODUCTION5.2 DIFFICULTIES OF PREPARATIONS5.3 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; REFERENCES; Chapter 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 MILLING; REFERENCESChapter 7. Mechanically Induced Solid-State Reduction7.1 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 METHOD; REFERENCES; Chapter 8. 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 RANGE8.6 AMORPHIZATION VIA MECHANICAL ALLOYING WHEN ΔHfor = 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 A150Ta50 IN A ROD MILL; 8.9 MECHANICALLY-INDUCED CYCLIC CRYSTALLINE-AMORPHOUS TRANSFORMATIONS DURING MECHANICAL ALLOYING; REFERENCES; IndexUnique 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 ofMechanical alloyingPhysical metallurgyMechanical alloying.Physical metallurgy.669.9669/.95 21669.95El-Eskandarany M. Sherif1612665MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911006835303321Mechanical alloying for fabrication of advanced engineering materials4389268UNINA03884nam 2200649 a 450 991096004310332120251019235431.01-282-39849-0978661239849090-474-4330-610.1163/ej.9789004166707.i-351(CKB)1000000000821754(EBL)467946(OCoLC)592756330(SSID)ssj0000337151(PQKBManifestationID)11929305(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000337151(PQKBWorkID)10287638(PQKB)11027145(MiAaPQ)EBC467946(nllekb)BRILL9789047443308(Au-PeEL)EBL467946(CaPaEBR)ebr10363815(CaONFJC)MIL239849(PPN)174390513(EXLCZ)99100000000082175420080701d2009 uy 0engur|n|||||||||txtccrThe empire of Cnut the Great conquest and the consolidation of power in Northern Europe in the early eleventh century /by Timothy BoltonLeiden ;Boston Brill20091 online resource (367 p.)The northern world,1569-1462 ;v. 40Description based upon print version of record.90-04-16670-X Includes bibliographical references (p. [325]-343) and index.Preliminary Materials /T. Bolton --General Introduction /T. Bolton --Chapter One. Introduction /T. Bolton --Chapter Two. National Government In Cnut’s Reign: The Royal Court /T. Bolton --Chapter Three. The Government In The Localities Of Southumbrian England In The Reign Of Cnut /T. Bolton --Chapter Four. Cnut And The English Church /T. Bolton --Chapter Five. Cnut And The Imperium Of Late Anglo-Saxon England: Northumbria, Wales, Scotland And Ireland /T. Bolton --Chapter Six. Introduction /T. Bolton --Chapter Seven. Cnut And The Development Of The ‘Machinery Of Control’ In Western And Central Denmark /T. Bolton --Chapter Eight. Cnut, Eastern Denmark And The Baltic: The Struggle For Supremacy /T. Bolton --Chapter Nine. Danish Supremacy In Scandinavia In The Early Eleventh Century: Cnut And The Regimes Of Norway And Sweden /T. Bolton --Chapter Ten. The Conquest Of Norway And The Development Of Imperial Aspirations /T. Bolton --Conclusion /T. Bolton --Appendix A /T. Bolton --Appendix B /T. Bolton --Bibliography /T. Bolton --Index /T. Bolton.The reign of King Cnut the Great (1016–1035) marks a pivotal point in the history of both England and Scandinavia, yet his conquests and his consolidation of power remain under-appreciated and rarely studied. Almost all existing scholarship has been geographically centred on either England or Scandinavia. However, this study, through a series of studies of individual aspects of his rise to power in those regions, seeks to encompass his entire dominion, and cast new light on our understanding of the nature of this political unit and contemporary figures’ conceptions of it. The result is a fresh impression of a number of aspects of Cnut’s rise to power as well as a new interpretation of this ‘empire’.Northern world ;v. 40.DanesEnglandHistoryGreat BritainHistoryCanute, 1017-1035Great BritainKings and rulersBiographyDenmarkKings and rulersBiographyNorwayKings and rulersBiographyDanesHistory.942.01/81092Bolton Timothy1113652MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910960043103321The empire of Cnut the Great4447009UNINA