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Corrosion Behavior of Copper under Droplets of Artificial Sweat下载
weixin_39820780
2020-09-14 10:30:27
铜在模拟汗液液滴环境下腐蚀行为,文磊,金莹,本文利用动电位极化曲线、电化学阻抗谱、电偶电流分布等多种电话学方法研究了人体汗液各组成成分对铜腐蚀行为的影响、铜的腐蚀机
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Corrosion Behavior of Copper under Droplets of Artificial Sweat下载
铜在模拟汗液液滴环境下腐蚀行为,文磊,金莹,本文利用动电位极化曲线、电化学阻抗谱、电偶电流分布等多种电话学方法研究了人体汗液各组成成分对铜腐蚀行为的影响、铜的腐蚀机 相关下载链接://download.csdn.net/download/weixin_38605538/12132105?utm_source=bbsseo
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Cor
ros
ion
Behavior
of
Copper
under
Drop
let
s of
Artificial
Sweat
铜在模拟汗液液滴环境下腐蚀行为,文磊,金莹,本文利用动电位极化曲线、电化学阻抗谱、电偶电流分布等多种电话学方法研究了人体汗液各组成成分对铜腐蚀行为的影响、铜的腐蚀机
Mechanical
Behavior
of Materials (1)
Chapter 1 Materials: Structure, Properties, and Performance 1 1.1 Introduct
ion
1 1.2 Monolithic, Composite, and Hierarchical Materials 3 1.3 Structure of Materials 15 1.3.1 Crystal Structures 16 1.3.2 Metals 19 1.3.3 Ceramics 25 1.3.4 Glasses 30 1.3.5 Polymers 31 1.3.6 Liquid Crystals 39 1.3.7 Biological Materials and Biomaterials 40 1.3.8 Porous and Cellular Materials 44 1.3.9 Nano- and Mic
ros
tructure of Biological Materials 45 1.3.10 The Sponge Spicule: An Example of a Biological Material 56 1.3.11 Active (or Smart) Materials 57 1.3.12 Electronic Materials 58 1.3.13 Nanotechnology 60 1.4 Strength of Real Materials 61 Suggested Reading 64 Exercises 65 Chapter 2 Elasticity and Viscoelasticity 71 2.1 Introduct
ion
71 2.2 Longitudinal Stress and Strain 72 2.3 Strain Energy (or Deformat
ion
Energy) Density 77 2.4 Shear Stress and Strain 80 2.5 Poisson’s Ratio 83 2.6 More Complex States of Stress 85 2.7 Graphical Solut
ion
of a Biaxial State of Stress: the Mohr Circle 89 2.8 Pure Shear: Relat
ion
ship between G and E 95 2.9 Anisotropic Effects 96 2.10 Elastic Properties of Polycrystals 107 2.11 Elastic Properties of Materials 110 2.11.1 Elastic Properties of Metals 111 2.11.2 Elastic Properties of Ceramics 111 2.11.3 Elastic Properties of Polymers 116 2.11.4 Elastic Constants of Unidirect
ion
al Fiber Reinforced Composite 117 2.12 Viscoelasticity 120 2.12.1 Storage and Loss Moduli 124 2.13 Rubber Elasticity 126 2.14 Mooney--Rivlin Equat
ion
131 2.15 Elastic Properties of Biological Materials 134 2.15.1 Blood Vessels 134 2.15.2 Articular Cartilage 137 2.15.3 Mechanical Properties at the Nanometer Level 140 2.16 Elastic Properties of Electronic Materials 143 2.17 Elastic Constants and Bonding 145 Suggested Reading 155 Exercises 155 Chapter 3 Plasticity 161 3.1 Introduct
ion
161 3.2 Plastic Deformat
ion
in Tens
ion
163 3.2.1 Tensile Curve Parameters 171 3.2.2 Necking 172 3.2.3 Strain Rate Effects 176 3.3 Plastic Deformat
ion
in Compress
ion
Testing 183 3.4 The Bauschunger Effect 187 3.5 Plastic Deformat
ion
of Polymers 188 3.5.1 Stress--Strain Curves 188 3.5.2 Glassy Polymers 189 3.5.3 Semicrystalline Polymers 190 3.5.4 Viscous Flow 191 3.5.5 Adiabatic Heating 192 3.6 Plastic Deformat
ion
of Glasses 193 3.6.1 Mic
ros
copic Deformat
ion
Mechanism 195 3.6.2 Temperature Dependence and Viscosity 197 3.7 Flow, Yield, and Failure Criteria 199 3.7.1 Maximum-Stress Criter
ion
(Rankine) 200 3.7.2 Maximum-Shear-Stress Criter
ion
(Tresca) 200 3.7.3 Maximum-Distort
ion
-Energy Criter
ion
(von Mises) 201 3.7.4 Graphical Representat
ion
and Experimental Verificat
ion
of Rankine, Tresca, and von Mises Criteria 201 3.7.5 Failure Criteria for Brittle Materials 205 3.7.6 Yield Criteria for Ductile Polymers 209 3.7.7 Failure Criteria for Composite Materials 211 3.7.8 Yield and Failure Criteria for Other Anisotropic Materials 213 3.8 Hardness 214 3.8.1 Macroindentat
ion
Tests 216 3.8.2 Microindentat
ion
Tests 221 3.8.3 Nanoindentat
ion
225 3.9 Formability: Important Parameters 229 3.9.1 Plastic Anisotropy 231 3.9.2 Punch--Stretch Tests and Forming-Limit Curves (or Keeler--Goodwin Diagrams) 232 3.10 Muscle Force 237 3.11 Mechanical Properties of Some Biological Materials 241 Suggested Reading 245 Exercises 246 Chapter 4 Imperfect
ion
s: Point and Line Defects 251 4.1 Introduct
ion
251 4.2 Theoretical Shear Strength 252 4.3 Atomic or Electronic Point Defects 254 4.3.1 Equilibrium Concentrat
ion
of Point Defects 256 4.3.2 Product
ion
of Point Defects 259 4.3.3 Effect of Point Defects on Mechanical Properties 260 4.3.4 Radiat
ion
Damage 261 4.3.5
Ion
Implantat
ion
265 4.4 Line Defects 266 4.4.1 Experimental Observat
ion
of Dislocat
ion
s 270 4.4.2
Behavior
of Dislocat
ion
s 273 4.4.3 Stress Field Around Dislocat
ion
s 275 4.4.4 Energy of Dislocat
ion
s 278 4.4.5 Force Required to Bow a Dislocat
ion
282 4.4.6 Dislocat
ion
s in Various Structures 284 4.4.7 Dislocat
ion
s in Ceramics 293 4.4.8 Sources of Dislocat
ion
s 298 4.4.9 Dislocat
ion
Pileups 302 4.4.10 Intersect
ion
of Dislocat
ion
s 304 4.4.11 Deformat
ion
Produced by Mot
ion
of Dislocat
ion
s (Orowan’s Equat
ion
) 306 4.4.12 The Peierls--Nabarro Stress 309 4.4.13 The Movement of Dislocat
ion
s: Temperature and Strain Rate Effects 310 4.4.14 Dislocat
ion
s in Electronic Materials 313 Suggested Reading 316 Exercises 317 Chapter 5 Imperfect
ion
s: Interfacial and Volumetric Defects 321 5.1 Introduct
ion
321 5.2 Grain Boundaries 321 5.2.1 Tilt and Twist Boundaries 326 5.2.2 Energy of a Grain Boundary 328 5.2.3 Variat
ion
of Grain-Boundary Energy with Misorientat
ion
330 5.2.4 Coincidence Site Lattice (CSL) Boundaries 332 5.2.5 Grain-Boundary Triple Junct
ion
s 334 5.2.6 Grain-Boundary Dislocat
ion
s and Ledges 334 5.2.7 Grain Boundaries as a Packing of Polyhedral Units 336 5.3 Twinning and Twin Boundaries 336 5.3.1 Crystallography and Morphology 337 5.3.2 Mechanical Effects 341 5.4 Grain Boundaries in Plastic Deformat
ion
(Grain-size Strengthening) 345 5.4.1 Hall--Petch Theory 348 5.4.2 Cottrell’s Theory 349 5.4.3 Li’s Theory 350 5.4.4 Meyers--Ashworth Theory 351 5.5 Other Internal Obstacles 353 5.6 Nanocrystalline Materials 355 5.7 Volumetric or Tridimens
ion
al Defects 358 5.8 Imperfect
ion
s in Polymers 361 Suggested Reading 364 Exercises 364 Chapter 6 Geometry of Deformat
ion
and Work-Hardening 369 6.1 Introduct
ion
369 6.2 Geometry of Deformat
ion
373 6.2.1 Stereographic Project
ion
s 373 6.2.2 Stress Required for Slip 374 6.2.3 Shear Deformat
ion
380 6.2.4 Slip in Systems and Work-Hardening 381 6.2.5 Independent Slip Systems in Polycrystals 384 6.3 Work-Hardening in Polycrystals 384 6.3.1 Taylor’s Theory 386 6.3.2 Seeger’s Theory 388 6.3.3 Kuhlmann--Wilsdorf’s Theory 388 6.4 Softening Mechanisms 392 6.5 Texture Strengthening 395 Suggested Reading 399 Exercises 399 Chapter 7 Fracture: Mac
ros
copic Aspects 404 7.1 Introduct
ion
404 7.2 Theorectical Tensile Strength 406 7.3 Stress Concentrat
ion
and Griffith Criter
ion
of Fracture 409 7.3.1 Stress Concentrat
ion
s 409 7.3.2 Stress Concentrat
ion
Factor 409 7.4 Griffith Criter
ion
416 7.5 Crack Propagat
ion
with Plasticity 419 7.6 Linear Elastic Fracture Mechanics 421 7.6.1 Fracture Toughness 422 7.6.2 Hypotheses of LEFM 423 7.6.3 Crack-Tip Separat
ion
Modes 423 7.6.4 Stress Field in an Isotropic Material in the Vicinity of a Crack Tip 424 7.6.5 Details of the Crack-Tip Stress Field in Mode I 425 7.6.6 Plastic-Zone Size
Cor
rect
ion
428 7.6.7 Variat
ion
in Fracture Toughness with Thickness 431 7.7 Fracture Toughness Parameters 434 7.7.1 Crack Extens
ion
Force G 434 7.7.2 Crack Opening Displacement 437 7.7.3 J Integral 440 7.7.4 R Curve 443 7.7.5 Relat
ion
ships among Different Fracture Toughness Parameters 444 7.8 Importance of K I c in Practice 445 7.9 Post-Yield Fracture Mechanics 448 7.10 Statistical Analysis of Failure Strength 449 Appendix: Stress Singularity at Crack Tip 458 Suggested Reading 460 Exercises 460 Chapter 8 Fracture: Mic
ros
copic Aspects 466 8.1 Introduct
ion
466 8.2 Facture in Metals 468 8.2.1 Crack Nucleat
ion
468 8.2.2 Ductile Fracture 469 8.2.3 Brittle, or Cleavage, Fracture 480 8.3 Facture in Ceramics 487 8.3.1 Mic
ros
tructural Aspects 487 8.3.2 Effect of Grain Size on Strength of Ceramics 494 8.3.3 Fracture of Ceramics in Tens
ion
496 8.3.4 Fracture in Ceramics Under Compress
ion
499 8.3.5 Thermally Induced Fracture in Ceramics 504 8.4 Fracture in Polymers 507 8.4.1 Brittle Fracture 507 8.4.2 Crazing and Shear Yielding 508 8.4.3 Fracture in Semicrystalline and Crystalline Polymers 512 8.4.4 Toughness of Polymers 513 8.5 Fracture and Toughness of Biological Materials 517 8.6 Facture Mechanism Maps 521 Suggested Reading 521 Exercises 521 Chapter 9 Fracture Testing 525 9.1 Introduct
ion
525 9.2 Impact Testing 525 9.2.1 Charpy Impact Test 526 9.2.2
Drop
-Weight Test 529 9.2.3 Instrumented Charpy Impact Test 531 9.3 Plane-Strain Fracture Toughness Test 532 9.4 Crack Opening Displacement Testing 537 9.5 J-Integral Testing 538 9.6 Flexure Test 540 9.6.1 Three-Point Bend Test 541 9.6.2 Four-Point Bending 542 9.6.3 Interlaminar Shear Strength Test 543 9.7 Fracture Toughness Testing of Brittle Materials 545 9.7.1 Chevron Notch Test 547 9.7.2 Indentat
ion
Methods for Determining Toughness 549 9.8 Adhes
ion
of Thin Films to Substrates 552 Suggested Reading 553 Exercises 553 Chapter 10 Solid Solut
ion
, Precipitat
ion
, and Dispers
ion
Strengthening 558 10.1 Introduct
ion
558 10.2 Solid-Solut
ion
Strengthening 559 10.2.1 Elastic Interact
ion
560 10.2.2 Other Interact
ion
s 564 10.3 Mechanical Effects Associated with Solid Solut
ion
s 564 10.3.1 Well-Defined Yield Point in the Stress--Strain Curves 565 10.3.2 Plateau in the Stress--Strain Curve and L¨uders Band 566 10.3.3 Strain Aging 567 10.3.4 Serrated Stress--Strain Curve 568 10.3.5 Snoek Effect 569 10.3.6 Blue Brittleness 570 10.4 Precipitat
ion
- and Dispers
ion
-Hardening 571 10.5 Dislocat
ion
--Precipitate Interact
ion
579 10.6 Precipitat
ion
in Microalloyed Steels 585 10.7 Dual-Phase Steels 590 Suggested Reading 590 Exercises 591 Chapter 11 Martensitic Transformat
ion
594 11.1 Introduct
ion
594 11.2 Structures and Morphologies of Martensite 594 11.3 Strength of Martensite 600 11.4 Mechanical Effects 603 11.5 Shape-Memory Effect 608 11.5.1 Shape-Memory Effect in Polymers 614 11.6 Martensitic Transformat
ion
in Ceramics 614 Suggested Reading 618 Exercises 619 Chapter 12 Special Materials: Intermetallics and Foams 621 12.1 Introduct
ion
621 12.2 Silicides 621 12.3 Ordered Intermetallics 622 12.3.1 Dislocat
ion
Structures in Ordered Intermetallics 624 12.3.2 Effect of Ordering on Mechanical Properties 628 12.3.3 Ductility of Intermetallics 634 12.4 Cellular Materials 639 12.4.1 Structure 639 12.4.2 Modeling of the Mechanical Response 639 12.4.3 Comparison of Predict
ion
s and Experimental Results 645 12.4.4 Syntactic Foam 645 12.4.5 Plastic
Behavior
of Porous Materials 646 Suggested Reading 650 Exercises 650 Chapter 13 Creep and Superplasticity 653 13.1 Introduct
ion
653 13.2
Cor
relat
ion
and Extrapolat
ion
Methods 659 13.3 Fundamental Mechanisms Responsible for Creep 665 13.4 Diffus
ion
Creep 666 13.5 Dislocat
ion
(or Power Law) Creep 670 13.6 Dislocat
ion
Glide 673 13.7 Grain-Boundary Sliding 675 13.8 Deformat
ion
-Mechanism (Weertman--Ashby) Maps 676 13.9 Creep-Induced Fracture 678 13.10 Heat-Resistant Materials 681 13.11 Creep in Polymers 688 13.12 Diffus
ion
-Related Phenomena in Electronic Materials 695 13.13 Superplasticity 697 Suggested Reading 705 Exercises 705 Chapter 14 Fatigue 713 14.1 Introduct
ion
713 14.2 Fatigue Parameters and S--N (W¨ohler) Curves 714 14.3 Fatigue Strength or Fatigue Life 716 14.4 Effect of Mean Stress on Fatigue Life 719 14.5 Effect of Frequency 721 14.6 Cumulative Damage and Life Exhaust
ion
721 14.7 Mechanisms of Fatigue 725 14.7.1 Fatigue Crack Nucleat
ion
725 14.7.2 Fatigue Crack Propagat
ion
730 14.8 Linear Elastic Fracture Mechanics Applied to Fatigue 735 14.8.1 Fatigue of Biomaterials 744 14.9 Hysteretic Heating in Fatigue 746 14.10 Environmental Effects in Fatigue 748 14.11 Fatigue Crack Closure 748 14.12 The Two-Parameter Approach 749 14.13 The Short-Crack Problem in Fatigue 750 14.14 Fatigue Testing 751 14.14.1 Convent
ion
al Fatigue Tests 751 14.14.2 Rotating Bending Machine 751 14.14.3 Statistical Analysis of S--N Curves 753 14.14.4 Nonconvent
ion
al Fatigue Testing 753 14.14.5 Servohydraulic Machines 755 14.14.6 Low-Cycle Fatigue Tests 756 14.14.7 Fatigue Crack Propagat
ion
Testing 757 Suggested Reading 758 Exercises 759 Chapter 15 Composite Materials 765 15.1 Introduct
ion
765 15.2 Types of Composites 765 15.3 Important Reinforcements and Matrix Materials 767 15.3.1 Mic
ros
tructural Aspects and Importance of the Matrix 769 15.4 Interfaces in Composites 770 15.4.1 Crystallographic Nature of the Fiber--Matrix Interface 771 15.4.2 Interfacial Bonding in Composites 772 15.4.3 Interfacial Interact
ion
s 773 15.5 Properties of Composites 774 15.5.1 Density and Heat Capacity 775 15.5.2 Elastic Moduli 775 15.5.3 Strength 780 15.5.4 Anisotropic Nature of Fiber Reinforced Composites 783 15.5.5 Aging Response of Matrix in MMCs 785 15.5.6 Toughness 785 15.6 Load Transfer from Matrix to Fiber 788 15.6.1 Fiber and Matrix Elastic 789 15.6.2 Fiber Elastic and Matrix Plastic 792 15.7 Fracture in Composites 794 15.7.1 Single and Multiple Fracture 795 15.7.2 Failure Modes in Composites 796 15.8 Some Fundamental Characteristics of Composites 799 15.8.1 Heterogeneity 799 15.8.2 Anisotropy 799 15.8.3 Shear Coupling 801 15.8.4 Statistical Variat
ion
in Strength 802 15.9 Funct
ion
ally Graded Materials 803 15.10 Applicat
ion
s 803 15.10.1 Ae
ros
pace Applicat
ion
s 803 15.10.2 Nonae
ros
pace Applicat
ion
s 804 15.11 Laminated Composites 806 Suggested Reading 809 Exercises 810 Chapter 16 Environmental Effects 815 16.1 Introduct
ion
815 16.2 Electrochemical Nature of
Cor
ros
ion
in Metals 815 16.2.1 Galvanic
Cor
ros
ion
816 16.2.2 Uniform
Cor
ros
ion
817 16.2.3 Crevice
cor
ros
ion
817 16.2.4 Pitting
Cor
ros
ion
818 16.2.5 Intergranular
Cor
ros
ion
818 16.2.6 Selective leaching 819 16.2.7 E
ros
ion
-
Cor
ros
ion
819 16.2.8 Radiat
ion
Damage 819 16.2.9 Stress
Cor
ros
ion
819 16.3 Oxidat
ion
of metals 819 16.4 Environmentally Assisted Fracture in Metals 820 16.4.1 Stress
Cor
ros
ion
Cracking (SCC) 820 16.4.2 Hydrogen Damage in Metals 824 16.4.3 Liquid and Solid Metal Embrittlement 830 16.5 Environmental Effects in Polymers 831 16.5.1 Chemical or Solvent Attack 832 16.5.2 Swelling 832 16.5.3 Oxidat
ion
833 16.5.4 Radiat
ion
Damage 834 16.5.5 Environmental Crazing 835 16.5.6 Alleviating the Environmental Damage in Polymers 836 16.6 Environmental Effects in Ceramics 836 16.6.1 Oxidat
ion
of Ceramics 839 Suggested Reading 840 Exercises 840 Appendixes 843 Index 851
Study on
cor
ros
ion
behavior
of as-extruded AZ80 magnesium alloy sheet in wet H2S atmosphere
挤压AZ80镁合金板材在湿硫化氢气氛中的腐蚀行为研究,周明扬,任凌宝,采用宏观观察、光学显微镜观察、扫描电子显微镜观察、激光共聚焦显微镜观察、X射线衍射分析以及室温拉伸等方法研究了挤压AZ80镁合�
Pitting and galvanic
cor
ros
ion
behavior
of stainless steel with weld in wet-dry environment containing Cl? (2007年)
Abstracts: Accelerated
cor
ros
ion
test of stainless steel with weld was carried out to investigate the
cor
ros
ion
behavior
under the wet-dry cyclic condit
ion
in the atmosphere containing Cl-. In the surface morphology,
cor
ros
ion
products were analyzed by me
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