Synopsis
Materials science includes those parts of chemistry and physics that deal with the properties of materials. It encompasses four classes of materials, the study of each of which may be considered a separate field: metals; ceramics; polymers and composites. Materials science is often referred to as materials science and engineering because it has many applications. Industrial applications of materials science include processing techniques (casting, rolling, welding, ion implantation, crystal growth, thin-film deposition, sintering, glassblowing, etc.), analytical techniques (electron microscopy, x-ray diffraction, calorimetry, nuclear microscopy (HEFIB) etc.), materials design, and cost/benefit tradeoffs in industrial production of materials. This book presents new research directions in a very new field which happens to be an old field as well.
Table Of Contents
Preface
Cooperative Anisotropic Theory of Ferromagnetic Hysteresis
Carl S. Schneider
Image Reconstruction and Geometrical Analysis of Three-Dimensional Fracture Surfaces in Materials
Manabu Tanaka
Yosuke Kimura
Ryuichi Kato
Junnosuke Taguchi
Naohide Oyama
Optical Properties of Pd-Free Au-Pt-Based High Noble Alloys
Takanobu Shiraishi
Yield Surface of Shape Memory Alloys
W.M. Huang
X.Y. Gao
Recent Advances in Photoluminescence of Amorphous Condensed Matter
Jai Singh
The Thermoluminescent (TL) Properties of the Perovskite-Like KMgF3 Activated by Various Dopants: A Review
C. Furetta
C. Sanipoli
The Equivalent Simple Cubic System: A New Tool to Model Real Powder Systems under Compression
J.M. Montes
F.G. Cuevas
J. Cintas
J.A. Rodriguez
E.J. Herrera
Barium Ion Leaching and its Effect on Aqueous Barium Titanate Tape Properties
Dang-Hyok Yoon
Burtrand I. Lee
Surface Processes in Charge Decay of Electrets
G. A. Mekishev
Theoretical Studies of QID Organic Conductors: A Personal Review
Vladan Celebonovic
Index