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  2. Getter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Getter

    The vaporized getter, usually a volatile metal, instantly reacts with any residual gas, and then condenses on the cool walls of the tube in a thin coating, the getter spot or getter mirror, which continues to absorb gas. This is the most common type, used in low-power vacuum tubes. Non-evaporable getter (NEG) [8]

  3. Zirconium hydride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zirconium_hydride

    Zirconium is extracted from zirconium ore by removing the oxygen and silica. This process, known as the Kroll process, was first applied to titanium. The Kroll process results in an alloy containing hafnium. The hafnium and other impurities are removed in a subsequent step. Zirconium hydride is created by combining refined zirconium with hydrogen.

  4. Barium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barium

    Barium has few industrial applications. Historically, it was used as a getter for vacuum tubes and in oxide form as the emissive coating on indirectly heated cathodes. It is a component of YBCO (high-temperature superconductors) and electroceramics, and is added to steel and cast iron to reduce the size of carbon grains within the ...

  5. 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]

  6. Streeter–Phelps equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streeter–Phelps_equation

    The model describes how dissolved oxygen (DO) decreases in a river or stream along a certain distance by degradation of biochemical oxygen demand (BOD). The equation was derived by H. W. Streeter, a sanitary engineer, and Earle B. Phelps , a consultant for the U.S. Public Health Service , in 1925, based on field data from the Ohio River .

  7. Oxygen window - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxygen_window

    The oxygen window effect in decompression is described in diving medical texts and the limits reviewed by Van Liew et al. in 1993. [ 1 ] [ 11 ] When living animals are in steady state, the sum of the partial pressures of dissolved gases in the tissues is usually less than atmospheric pressure, a phenomenon known as the "oxygen window", "partial ...

  8. Oxygen enhancement ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxygen_enhancement_ratio

    The oxygen enhancement ratio (OER) or oxygen enhancement effect in radiobiology refers to the enhancement of therapeutic or detrimental effect of ionizing radiation due to the presence of oxygen. This so-called oxygen effect [1] is most notable when cells are exposed to an ionizing radiation dose. The OER is traditionally defined as the ratio ...

  9. Piezoelectricity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piezoelectricity

    Piezoelectric balance presented by Pierre Curie to Lord Kelvin, Hunterian Museum, Glasgow. Piezoelectricity (/ ˌ p iː z oʊ-, ˌ p iː t s oʊ-, p aɪ ˌ iː z oʊ-/, US: / p i ˌ eɪ z oʊ-, p i ˌ eɪ t s oʊ-/) [1] is the electric charge that accumulates in certain solid materials—such as crystals, certain ceramics, and biological matter such as bone, DNA, and various proteins—in ...