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Journal ArticleDOI

Overview No. 104 The physical and mechanical properties of NiAl

Daniel B. Miracle
- 01 Mar 1993 - 
- Vol. 41, Iss: 3, pp 649-684
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TLDR
A critical review of the physical and mechanical properties of NiAl is presented in this paper, which includes electronic structure and bonding, crystal structure and phase stability, thermodynamic properties, elastic properties, and electrical, magnetic, and thermal properties.
Abstract
A critical review of the physical and mechanical properties of NiAl is presented. The physical properties examined include electronic structure and bonding, crystal structure and phase stability, thermodynamic properties, elastic properties, and electrical, magnetic, and thermal properties. Discussion of crystal defects in NiAl include both constitutional and thermal point defects, the core structure and energy of line defects, and planar defects (shear faults, grain boundaries, and free surfaces). The mechanical properties, substructure, and mechanisms of ductility of NiAl single crystals and polycrystals are reviewed in detail, while alloying effects and the deformation of NiAl martensite are briefly described. The fracture toughness, modes of fracture, and cyclic properties reported in the literature are assessed. A critical analysis of diffusion data for NiAl is followed by a discussion of the activation energy and mechanisms of diffusion. This information is related to the creep properties of NiAl, and additional critical comments concerning the substructure and creep mechanisms of NiAl are provided. A review of the environmental resistance of NiAl is followed by a brief discussion of several current and potential applications of NiAl. Concluding remarks include suggestions for future research on NiAl.

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Citations
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Elastic and Mechanical Properties of the MAX Phases

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Novel materials synthesis by mechanical alloying/milling

TL;DR: In this article, an account is given of the research that has been carried out on mechanical alloying/milling (MA/MM) during the past 25 years, highlighting the success of MA in producing ODS alloys with better high temperature capabilities in comparison with other processing routes.
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Deviation from high-entropy configurations in the atomic distributions of a multi-principal-element alloy

TL;DR: It is shown that, even when the material undergoes elemental segregation, precipitation, chemical ordering and spinodal decomposition, a significant amount of disorder remains, due to the distributions of multiple elements in the major phases.
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High-entropy Al0.3CoCrFeNi alloy fibers with high tensile strength and ductility at ambient and cryogenic temperatures

TL;DR: In this paper, high-entropy alloys (HEAs) are multi-component systems based on novel alloy composition designs with entropy maximization They feature an array of unique mechanical properties when compared with traditional alloys.
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Engineering Properties of Fibrous Peats

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an interpretation of the permeability, compressibility, and shear strength of fibrous peats using data from laboratory tests on undisturbed block samples of two Fibrous Peats, as well as extensive laboratory and field data from the literature on fibrous Peat deposits.
References
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Book

Selected values of the thermodynamic properties of binary alloys

TL;DR: A complete revision of the work, Selected Values of Thermodynamic Properties of Metals and Alloys, by Hultgren, Orr, Anderson, and Kelley, published in 1963 by John Wiley and Sons, New York, is presented in this paper.

High-temperature ordered intermetallic alloys

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the behavior of grain boundaries in a two-dimensional model ordered alloy and the effects of elastic anisotropy on the anomalious yield behavior of cubic ordered alloys.