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Spray Rolling Of Rapidly Solidified Al-fe-v-si AlloyOzyurda, Akin Halit 01 May 2006 (has links) (PDF)
In this study an experimental spray-rolling set-up is designed in order to produce rapidly solidified Al-Fe-V-Si flat product. Al-Fe-V-Si alloys produced by rapid solidification powder metallurgy (RSP/M) methods are mostly used in high temperature applications in aerospace and automotive industries. The RSP/M technique used is spray deposition, which is desirable because of the high cooling rates achieved, as a result fine silicide dispersoids and intermetallics are observed in the microstructure which are known to contribute to the mechanical properties i.e. high strength at elevated temperatures, thermal stability, fracture toughness, corrosion resistance. Since spray deposition is a droplet consolidation process a considerable amount of porosity is expected in the final product. In this work, spray rolling process, which consists of spray deposition and subsequent hot twin-rolling stage, is designed and developed by interpreting the results obtained from SEM, XRD, tensile, three point bending and hardness tests of the specimens formed in several design stages. Two original intermetallic phases characterized in this study are V3Si and V2Mg3Al18 .
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Synthesis and characterisation of 114Cd targetsKheswa, Ntombizonke Yvonne January 2011 (has links)
>Magister Scientiae - MSc / To study nuclear reactions and nuclear structures, target materials are bombarded with high-energy particles. The target material can either be in a form of a metal film or gas. A target material designed to study certain nuclear reactions or to produce nuclei to study their structure should yield as minimum as possible of competing reactions under ion bombardment. This requires a chemically and isotopically pure target material prepared as a self supporting thin film, or as alternative, prepared on a thin career foil. Additional requirement for lifetime measurement experiments are homogeneity and precise thickness of the target material. Some of the data obtained from the stopping power experiment where targets of 114Cd were used for lifetime measurement are presented. Moreover, a nuclear target should influence the spectroscopic resolution as little as possible. Thus, film thickness must be adjusted to the respective reaction under study while observing the optimum thickness homogeneity.
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