solution hardening
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alloy processing
- In metallurgy: Increasing strength
…(a procedure known as solid solution hardening). The atoms of the alloying metals may substitute for matrix atoms on regular sites (in which case they are known as substitutional elements), or, if they are appreciably smaller than the matrix atoms, they may take up places between regular sites (where they…
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hardening treatments
- In metallurgy: Hardening treatments
…what is known as solid-solution hardening, but the alloy can usually be hardened appreciably more by aging to allow a very fine precipitate to form. Aging is done at an elevated temperature that is still well below the temperature at which the precipitate will dissolve. If the alloy is…
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steel alloys
- In steel: Effects of alloying
This phenomenon is called solution hardening. An even greater increase in strength is achieved by precipitation hardening, in which certain elements (e.g., titanium, niobium, and vanadium) do not stay in solid solution in ferrite during the cooling of steel but instead form finely dispersed, extremely small carbide or nitride…
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