Opening Remarks (a6b72079-bd8e-417f-a781-7b603f70224b)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 1
- File Size:
- 41 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1945
Abstract
CHAIRMAN M. A. HUNTER. UP to this time our stress-corrosion sessions have been concerned with stress-corrosion cracking in brass. In the succeeding sessions a variety of other products which are susceptible to stress-corrosion cracking are to be considered and this afternoon's session is to be devoted to stress-corrosion cracking in light metals. The problems you have had to deal with up to now in brass have been very simple ones. From this time on the complexities become greater. You have already learned in the preceding sessions, that copper is not susceptible to stress-corrosion cracking and when you begin to alloy it with 3 per cent or larger proportions of zinc, then stress- corrosion cracking ensues. You apparently have few complications in the copper alloys you make. There is apparently no precipitation on the grain boundaries in the brass, and no precipitation within the metal itself. So, on the whole, the problem is a simple one. Yet it has been with the brass people for a very long time and it is apparently not yet settled from the fact
Citation
APA:
(1945) Opening Remarks (a6b72079-bd8e-417f-a781-7b603f70224b)MLA: Opening Remarks (a6b72079-bd8e-417f-a781-7b603f70224b). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1945.