Types of Alloy

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Ronela Veronica R. Cartonero Mrs.

Catherine Fusilero

III-AQUAMARINE December 3, 2013

KINDS OF ALLOY
Martensitic

METALS COMBINED
Iron, 12-14% Chromium, 0.11% Carbon, 0.2-1% Molybdenum Types of Brass Alloy Composition Admiralty Brass Copper, 28% Zinc, 1% Tin Red Brass Copper, 5% Tin, 5% Lead, and 5% Zinc Yellow Brass copper, antimony, lead aluminium, cobalt Titanium,hydrogen Depleted uranium with other meatls,usually titanium or molybdenom Nickel, copper, iron with a small amont of phosphorus Copper:77%, Tin:23%, Mainly Copper with up to 50% Zinc Lead: 50% & Tin: 50% Mainly Copper with up to 12% Tin Aluminium: 95%, Copper: 4%, Manganese 1%, Magnesium: 0.5%

USES
It is used to make kitchen utensils, as stainless steel forms one of the most hygienic surfaces to store and prepare food in. used to make items that come in contact with harsh environment such as tubes, pipes, weather stripping and several architectural trim pieces

Yellow Brass

Babbitt Alnico Titanium hydride Stabballoy Monel Bell Metal Brass Solder metal Bronze Duralumin

used for bearing surfaces used in magnets Used in bearings because of its low measure of friction with steel Use in kinetic energy penetrator armor piercing munitions Corrrision resistant containers CASTING OF BELLS Inexpensive jewelry, hose nozzles and couplings, stamping dies. Joining two metals to each other. Coins & medals, heavy gears, tools electrical hardware. Aircraft, boats, railroad cars, and machinery because of its high strength & resistance to corrosion.

Phosphor bronze Type Metal

Bronze with a small amount of phosphorus Lead: 75 95%, Antimony: 2 18% & Tin in trace quantities. copper, magnesium, manganese, silicon and zinc nickel-iron magnetic alloy

Aluminium alloys Permalloy

Vitallium Cerrosafe Megallium

60% cobalt, 20% chromium, 5% molybdenum, and other substances Lead, tin, antimony 60% cobalt, 20% chromium, 5% molybdenum 86% copper, 12% manganese, and 2% nickel

Springs (normal & electrical) & boat propellers. Used to make type characters for printing; also used for making decorative objects like statuettes and candlesticks. used for wrought products, for example rolled plate, foils and extrusions. used in thin films where variable stresses would otherwise cause a ruinously large variation in magnetic properties. used for components of turbochargers because of its thermal resistance used by gunsmiths for making a reference casting of the chamber of a firearm used in dentistry because of its light weight, resistance to corrosion and hypo-allergenic (nickel free) properties used in the manufacture of resistors, particularly ammeter shunts, because of its virtually zero temperature coefficient of resistance value[1] and long term stability used for the earliest metal coins, and as early as the third millennium BC in Old Kingdom Egypt, sometimes as an exterior coating to the pyramidions atop ancient Egyptian pyramids and obelisks

Manganin

Electrum

gold and silver, with trace amounts of copper and other metals

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