Strength and Toughness of Materials

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As the shift from the Metal Age progresses, materials engineers and materials scientists seek new analytical and design methods to create stronger and more reliable materials. Based on extensive research and developmental work done at the author’s multi-disciplinary material laboratory, this graduate-level and professional reference addresses the relationship between fracture mechanisms (macroscale) and the microscopic, with the goal of explaining macroscopic fracture behavior based on a microscopic fracture mechanism. A careful fusion of mechanics and materials science, this text and monograph systematically considers an array of materials, from metals through ceramics and polymers, and demonstrates lab-tested strategies to develop desirable high-temperature materials for technological applications.

Author(s): Toshiro Kobayashi (auth.)
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer Tokyo
Year: 2004

Language: English
Pages: 275
Tags: Characterization and Evaluation of Materials; Continuum Mechanics and Mechanics of Materials

Front Matter....Pages II-X
Introduction....Pages 1-15
Basic Concepts of Fracture Mechanics....Pages 17-32
Principles of Strength and Toughness....Pages 33-52
Steels....Pages 53-87
Ductile Cast Iron....Pages 89-110
Wrought Aluminum Alloys....Pages 111-140
Cast Aluminum Alloys....Pages 141-161
Metal Matrix Composites....Pages 163-187
Titanium Alloys....Pages 189-207
Intermetallic Compounds....Pages 209-226
Ceramics....Pages 227-245
Polymers....Pages 247-263
Back Matter....Pages 265-275