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http://www.industrialheating.com/articles/print/90836-liquid-metal-emb...
impact toughness, creep and stress relaxation and fatigue properties 2. Physical property requirements such as thermal expansion/contraction, magnetic properties and elastic modulus 3. Service requirements such as correct preload/torque level, method of tightening (manual vs. automatic), lubricants, thread fit, tightening speed, surface finish, plating and galling behavior 4. Environmental requirements such as corrosive state of the environment, hydrogen embrittlement, stress corrosion cracking, crevice corrosion and pitting, corrosion fatigue, high-temperature effects and liquid-metal embrittlement Well continue in Part 3. References
1. de Rosset, William S., Use of Liquid Metal Embrittlement (LME) for Controlled Fracture, Army Research Laboratory, ARL-TR-4976, September 2009. 2. C. J. McMahon, Jr., Brittle Fracture of Grain Boundaries, Interface Science 12, 141- 146, 2004. 3. Bogner, B., G. Rorvik, and L. Marken, Bolt Failures Case Histories from the Norwegian Petroleum Industry, Microscopy and Microanalysis, Volume 11 Supplement S02, August 2005. 4. Wikipedia (www.wikipedia.com) 5. Krauss, George, Steels: Processing, Structure, and Performance, ASM International, 2005. 6. Kolman, D. G., Environmentally Induced Cracking, Liquid Metal Embrittlement, ASM Harndbook, Volume 13A, Corrosion: Fundamentals, Testing and Protection, ASM International, 2003., pp 381 392.
Dan Herring is president of THE HERRING GROUP Inc., which specializes in consulting services (heat treatment and metallurgy) and technical services (industrial education/training and process/equipment assistance. He is also a research associate professor at the Illinois Institute of Technology/Thermal Processing Technology Center.
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