Institution
Bethlehem Steel
About: Bethlehem Steel is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Coating & Corrosion. The organization has 1529 authors who have published 1559 publications receiving 19098 citations. The organization is also known as: Bethlehem Steel Corporation.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of the heat treating parameters on the properties and structure of molybdenum and vanadium bearing dual-phase steels was studied and the relationship between strength and ductility was independent of alloy addition.
Abstract: A systematic study was made of the effect of the heat treating parameters,(i.e., temperature, time, and cooling rate) on the properties and structure of molybdenum and vanadium bearing dual-phase steels. The volume percent martensite was found to be the major structural factor that controls the strength and ductility of these steels. The relationship between strength and ductility was independent of alloy addition for the alloys studied. Annealing temperature was shown to be very important in these alloys, especially at high quench rates. The molybdenum alloy exhibited better hardenability than the vanadium alloy for equivalent heat treating conditions. Therefore, for a given set of annealing conditions the molybdenum alloy generally had the highest tensile strength and lowest total elongation. A minimum in the 0.2 pct yield strength was found at a specific volume fraction martensite. The increase in yield strength at the lowest volume fraction studied can be related to a jog or discontinuity in the stress-strain curve during tensile testing. This jog was found to be the result of the lack of a sufficient amount of free dislocations. The causes of this deficiency of the dislocations may be: 1) an insufficient amount of transformed martensite, 2) a large martensite interparticle spacing, 3) dynamic recovery of dislocations during cooling, and 4) pinning of dislocations by precipitates during cooling.
44 citations
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30 Sep 1968TL;DR: In this article, the flat blanks are precoated with a dry film lubricant and drawn and ironed through a series of dies to prevent the thermal breakdown of the lubricant.
Abstract: A method and apparatus for forming thin-walled containers from flat blanks is disclosed herein. The flat blanks are precoated with a dry film lubricant and drawn and ironed through a series of dies. Apparatus is provided to prevent the thermal breakdown of the lubricant comprising an internally fluid-cooled punch and fluid-cooled dies.
44 citations
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09 Nov 1992TL;DR: An impact pad for eliminating surface turbulence in a continuous caster tundish, the impact pad having a base for receiving an incoming ladle stream, and one or more sidewalls extending in an upward direction along the periphery of the base as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: An impact pad for eliminating surface turbulence in a continuous caster tundish, the impact pad having a base for receiving an incoming ladle stream, and one or more sidewalls extending in an upward direction along the periphery of the base. Each upward extending sidewall includes an inner surface having an undercut portion facing the incoming ladle stream. And, each undercut portion extends along the length of the inner surface, and comprises a shaped surface for receiving and reversing the direction of a fluid flow generated by the incoming ladle stream.
43 citations
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23 Feb 1981TL;DR: A container for hazardous material has an outer shell, an inner cylindrical tank for hazardous materials, resilient filler material between the shell and the tank, flexible, impervious diaphragms fixed within the tank and extending transversely to the longitudinal axis of the tank to provide chambers adjacent each end of tank, and an arrangement to pressurize and de-pressurize the chambers as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: A container for hazardous material has an outer shell, an inner cylindrical tank for hazardous material, resilient filler material between the shell and the tank, flexible, impervious diaphragms fixed within the tank and extending transversely to the longitudinal axis of the tank to provide chambers adjacent each end of the tank, and an arrangement to pressurize and de-pressurize the chambers. The flexible, impervious diaphragms act as an energy absorbent in case the container is subjected to a sudden load and in addition the diaphragms allow for thermal expansion or contraction of the hazardous material in the tank.
43 citations
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01 Dec 1981-Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B-process Metallurgy and Materials Processing Science
TL;DR: The rate of dissociation of CO2 on liquid iron between about 1540 and 1740 °C and at CO/CO2 ratios of 6.7 to 100 has been studied by means of the 14CO2-CO exchange reaction.
Abstract: The rate of dissociation of CO2 on liquid iron between about 1540 and 1740 °C and at CO/CO2 ratios of 6.7 to 100 has been studied by means of the14CO2-CO exchange reaction. It is shown that for essentially pure iron the rate constant at low oxygen potential is consistent with that for the decarburization of liquid iron by CO2, indicating a common rate determining step. The influence of the gas composition on the rate is found to be consistent with surface blockage by adsorbed oxygen which obeys an ideal Langmuir adsorption isotherm over the experimentally accessible conditions. The adsorption coefficient for oxygen with respect to the infinitely dilute solution with 1 wt pct as standard state is deduced to be given by: logK′o = 11270/T – 4.09 The value of K′o at 1550 °C is found to be in good accord with the available data for the depression of the surface tension of liquid iron by oxygen.
42 citations
Authors
Showing all 1529 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Robert L. Byer | 130 | 1036 | 96272 |
Peter R. C. Howe | 58 | 278 | 12559 |
Pradeep K. Rohatgi | 55 | 362 | 11845 |
John G. Speer | 44 | 205 | 8521 |
Diran Apelian | 39 | 247 | 5811 |
Alan W. Cramb | 25 | 69 | 1981 |
Steven J. Eppell | 22 | 68 | 2725 |
J. R. Michael | 21 | 35 | 6820 |
Herbert E. Townsend | 16 | 58 | 1438 |
Francis J. Vasko | 16 | 65 | 860 |
Kenneth L. Stott | 12 | 21 | 433 |
Fritz Friedersdorf | 12 | 47 | 635 |
B. E. Wilde | 11 | 24 | 245 |
Floyd E. Wolf | 10 | 18 | 300 |
Steven S. Hansen | 10 | 19 | 650 |