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  2. RTI International Metals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RTI_International_Metals

    Reactive Metals Inc.), founded in 1950, is a leading US producer of titanium mill products and fabricated metal components for the global market. Through its various subsidiaries, RTI manufactures and distributes titanium and specialty metal mill products, extruded shapes, formed parts and engineered systems for aerospace , industrial, defense ...

  3. Titanium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanium

    Titanium is one of the few elements that burns in pure nitrogen gas, reacting at 800 °C (1,470 °F) to form titanium nitride, which causes embrittlement. [29] Because of its high reactivity with oxygen, nitrogen, and many other gases, titanium that is evaporated from filaments is the basis for titanium sublimation pumps , in which titanium ...

  4. Spruce Pine Mining District - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spruce_Pine_Mining_District

    The Spruce Pine Mining District is a swath of the valley of the North Toe River in the Blue Ridge Mountains of northwestern North Carolina. The area is mined for its mica, kaolin, quartz and feldspar. [1] Spruce Pine district is one of the largest suppliers of high-purity quartz, which is used in the manufacture of silicon for integrated ...

  5. Hunter process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunter_process

    The Hunter process was the first industrial process to produce pure metallic titanium. It was invented in 1910 by Matthew A. Hunter, a chemist born in New Zealand who worked in the United States. [1] The process involves reducing titanium tetrachloride (TiCl 4) with sodium (Na

  6. Van Arkel–de Boer process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Van_Arkel–de_Boer_process

    The van Arkel–de Boer process, also known as the iodide process or crystal-bar process, was the first industrial process for the commercial production of pure ductile titanium, zirconium and some other metals. It was developed by Anton Eduard van Arkel and Jan Hendrik de Boer in 1925 for Philips Nv.

  7. Titanium powder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanium_powder

    The tiny droplets are spherical and measure between 50 and 350 μm. The TGA process has been used to produce a wide variety of materials such as commercially pure (CP) titanium, conventional alpha-beta and beta alloys. [5] In plasma atomization (PA) process, a titanium wire is atomized by 3 inert gas plasma jets to form spherical metal powders.

  8. Commercially pure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commercially_pure

    Commercially pure materials, usually metals, are ones that have been purified to a practical extent, sufficient for commercial purposes; that is, they are close to absolute/theoretical purity albeit with some low-but-nonzero tolerance for impurities (such as trace metals) that allows for their economically viable production cost.

  9. Nanocrystalline material - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanocrystalline_material

    A nanocrystalline (NC) material is a polycrystalline material with a crystallite size of only a few nanometers. These materials fill the gap between amorphous materials without any long range order and conventional coarse-grained materials. Definitions vary, but nanocrystalline material is commonly defined as a crystallite (grain) size below ...