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Published: 01 January 2006
Fig. 1 Various components produced by metal spinning. Courtesy of Leifeld USA Metal Spinning, Inc.
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Published: 30 September 2015
Fig. 7 Harris Methodist Klabzuba Cancer Center, Ft. Worth, Texas, USA
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Published: 01 January 2001
Fig. 3 Factory Mutual filament-wound phenolic ducting. Courtesy of Composites USA
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Book: Corrosion: Materials
Series: ASM Handbook
Volume: 13B
Publisher: ASM International
Published: 01 January 2005
DOI: 10.31399/asm.hb.v13b.a0003968
EISBN: 978-1-62708-183-2
... the estimates of the cost of corrosion, made in various countries at various times. These are presented in chronological order by country. The data is extrapolated to a 2004 base and then projected to the global economy. In the United States (USA) the awareness of the cost of corrosion has been maintained...
Abstract
This article analyzes the estimates of the cost of corrosion, made in various countries at various times. The data are extrapolated to a 2004 base and then projected to the global economy. The chronological order of the countries are the United States of America, the United Kingdom, Australia, Japan, Canada, Germany, Poland, South Africa, Czechoslovakia, Belgium, Netherlands, Sweden, Finland, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Kuwait, India, and the Basque Region.
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Published: 01 January 2006
Fig. 4 Photograph of conical components that were produced by metal spinning. Courtesy of Leifeld USA Metal Spinning, Inc.
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Published: 15 December 2019
Fig. 6 Comparison of Auger electron escape depths with emission depths of backscattered electrons and x-rays. Courtesy of Physical Electronics, USA
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Published: 15 December 2019
Fig. 12 Setup of a typical Auger instrument using a hemispherical analyzer. SED, secondary electron detector. Courtesy of Physical Electronics, USA
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Published: 15 December 2019
Fig. 1 Schematic of energy-level diagrams showing (a) x-ray photon emission and (b) Auger electron emission. Courtesy of Physical Electronics, USA
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Published: 15 December 2019
Fig. 10 Key elements of a cylindrical-mirror analyzer used for Auger electron spectroscopy. SED, secondary electron detector. Courtesy of Physical Electronics, USA
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Published: 15 December 2019
Fig. 39 Auger spectra from bond pads of (a) a contaminated chip that exhibited bond failures and (b) a nominal chip. Courtesy of Physical Electronics, USA
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in Electrical/Electronic Applications for Advanced Ceramics
> Engineered Materials Handbook Desk Edition
Published: 01 November 1995
Fig. 29 Response of a commercial SnO 2 gas sensor to various reducing gas concentrations in air. Courtesy of Figaro Engineering Inc., Figaro USA
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Published: 01 January 2006
Fig. 18 American-style press-brake tooling. (a) Closeup. (b) Tooling with hydraulic clamping. (c) Removing tooling from tool clamp. Courtesy of Wila USA
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Published: 31 October 2011
Fig. 23 Cold metal-transfer process (metal inert gas/metal active gas dip-transfer arc process). Courtesy of Fronius USA LLC, 2007
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Published: 01 January 2005
Fig. 3 Typical microstructure of hot-dip galvanized coatings produced from a high aluminum (>0.15% Al) melt. Courtesy of Phil Fekula, Metal Steel USA.
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Published: 01 January 2005
Fig. 2 Typical microstructure of hot-dip galvanized coatings produced from a low aluminum (0.10–0.15% Al) melt. Courtesy of Phil Fekula, Metal Steel USA.
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Published: 01 January 2006
Fig. 10 Photograph of very large-diameter (∼2 m, or 6.5 ft) cone- and dish-shaped components produced by the Leifeld Company. Courtesy of Leifeld USA Metal Spinning, Inc.
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Published: 15 December 2019
Fig. 8 Auger spectra from alumina and aluminum showing peak shifts and plasmon-loss peak structures in elemental aluminum. Source: Ref 1 . Courtesy of Physical Electronics, USA
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Published: 15 December 2019
Fig. 11 KLL Auger spectrum of aluminum foil with native oxide obtained by using cylindrical - mirror analyzer resolutions at 0.5% (blue) and 0.1% (red). Courtesy of Physical Electronics, USA
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