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Gary S. Was

Researcher at University of Michigan

Publications -  487
Citations -  17725

Gary S. Was is an academic researcher from University of Michigan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Grain boundary & Stress corrosion cracking. The author has an hindex of 56, co-authored 474 publications receiving 14795 citations. Previous affiliations of Gary S. Was include Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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The heat-of-mixing effect on ion-induced grain growth

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of heat-of-mixing (ΔHmix) has been examined in ion-induced grain growth in multilayer (ML) and coevaporated (CO) thin films.
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Quantitative analysis of localized stresses in irradiated stainless steels using high resolution electron backscatter diffraction and molecular dynamics modeling

TL;DR: In this article, high resolution electron backscatter diffraction (HREBSD) measurements of stress near dislocation channel-grain boundary (DC-GB) interaction sites were made using high resolution HREBSD and have been compared with molecular dynamics simulations.
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A facility for studying irradiation accelerated corrosion in high temperature water

TL;DR: In this article, a facility for the study of irradiation accelerated corrosion in high temperature water using in situ proton irradiation has been developed and validated, where a specially designed beamline and flowing-water corrosion cell added to the 1.7 MV tandem accelerator at the Michigan Ion Beam Laboratory provide the capability to study the simultaneous effects of displacement damage and radiolysis on corrosion.
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Probing long-range ordering in nickel-base alloys with proton irradiation

TL;DR: In this paper, 12 commercial grade austenitic alloys based on the Ni-Cr-Mo-Fe quaternary system were irradiated using 2'MeV protons at 360'°C to a damage level of 2.5 displacements per atom (dpa).
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The Effect of Chromium, Carbon, and Yttrium on the Oxidation of Nickel-Base Alloys in High Temperature Water

TL;DR: In this article, the influence of chromium, carbon, and yttrium on the surface film formed on nickel-base alloys was investigated after 100 h of exposure in high purity, deaerated, hydrogenated water at 360°C.