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  2. Microstructure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microstructure

    Metallography allows the metallurgist to study the microstructure of metals. A micrograph of bronze revealing a cast dendritic structure Al-Si microstructure. Microstructure is the very small scale structure of a material, defined as the structure of a prepared surface of material as revealed by an optical microscope above 25× magnification. [1]

  3. Bainite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bainite

    Bainite is a plate-like microstructure that forms in steels at temperatures of 125–550 °C (depending on alloy content). [1] First described by E. S. Davenport and Edgar Bain, [2] [3] it is one of the products that may form when austenite (the face-centered cubic crystal structure of iron) is cooled past a temperature where it is no longer thermodynamically stable with respect to ferrite ...

  4. Pearlite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearlite

    Steels with pearlitic (eutectoid composition) or near-pearlitic microstructure (near-eutectoid composition) can be drawn into thin wires. Such wires, often bundled into ropes, are commercially used as piano wires, ropes for suspension bridges, and as steel cord for tire reinforcement.

  5. Metallography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metallography

    Spatially resolve acoustic spectroscopy is an optical technique that uses optically generated high frequency surface acoustic waves to probe the direction elastic parameters of the surface and, as such, it can vividly reveal the surface microstructure of metals. It can also image the crystallographic orientation and determine the single crystal ...

  6. Dendrite (metal) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dendrite_(metal)

    Dendritic crystallization after melting inside sealed ampules of rubidium and caesium metal. A dendrite in metallurgy is a characteristic tree-like structure of crystals growing as molten metal solidifies, the shape produced by faster growth along energetically favourable crystallographic directions. This dendritic growth has large consequences ...

  7. Austempering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austempering

    In steel it produces a bainite microstructure whereas in cast irons it produces a structure of acicular ferrite and high carbon, stabilized austenite known as ausferrite. It is primarily used to improve mechanical properties or reduce / eliminate distortion. Austempering is defined by both the process and the resultant microstructure.

  8. Lamellar structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamellar_structure

    In materials science, lamellar structures or microstructures are composed of fine, alternating layers of different materials in the form of lamellae. They are often observed in cases where a phase transition front moves quickly, leaving behind two solid products, as in rapid cooling of eutectic (such as solder ) or eutectoid (such as pearlite ...

  9. Austenite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austenite

    Iron-carbon phase diagram, showing the conditions under which austenite (γ) is stable in carbon steel. Allotropes of iron; alpha iron and gamma iron. Austenite, also known as gamma-phase iron (γ-Fe), is a metallic, non-magnetic allotrope of iron or a solid solution of iron with an alloying element. [1]