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1.
Merton C. Flemings 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A》2001,32(4):853-860
Metallurgy/materials education will continue to evolve to encompass, in an intellectually unified way, the full range of structural
and functional materials. Computation, information, and other advanced sciences and technologies will assume increasing roles
in materials education, as will distance and continuing education. The advantages of the changes will be many … to the graduates,
to emerging industries, and to the traditional metallurgical industries seeking productive, creative young engineers as employees.
The need for continuing change in our metallurgy/materials departments is now no less if we are to attract the best young
people into our field in the numbers needed and to best serve the needs of industry.
Merton C. Flemings received his S.B. degree from MIT in the Department of Metallurgy in 1951. He received his S.M. and Sc.D.
degrees, also in Metallurgy, in 1952 and 1954, respectively. From 1954 to 1956, he was employed as Metallurgist at Abex Corporation
(Mahwah, NJ), and in 1956 returned to MIT as Assistant Professor. He was appointed Associate Professor in 1961 and Professor
in 1969. In 1970, he was appointed Abex Professor of Metallurgy. In 1975, he became Ford Professor of Engineering, and, in
1981, Toyota Professor of Materials Processing. He established and was the first director of the Materials Processing. He
established and was the first director of the Materials Processing Center at MIT in 1979. He served as Head, Department of
Materials Science and Engineering, from 1982 to 1995 and thereafter returned to full-time teaching and research as Toyota
Professor. He was Visiting Professor at Cambridge University in 1971, Tokyo University in 1986, and Ecole des Mines in 1996.
In 1999, he was appointed Co-Director of the Singapore-MIT Alliance, a major distance educational and research collaboration
among MIT and two Singaporean universities.
Professor Flemings’ research and teaching concentrate on engineering fundamentals of materials processing and on innovation
of materials processing operations. He is active nationally and internationally in strengthening the field of Materials Science
and Engineering and in delineation of new directions for the field. He is a member of the National Academy of Engineering
and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is author or co-author of 300 papers, 26 patents, and 2 books in the
fields of solidification science and engineering, foundry technology, and materials processing. He has worked closely with
industry and industrial problems throughout his professional career and currently serves on a number of corporate and technical
advisory boards.
He received the Simpson Gold Medal from the American Foundrymen’s Society in 1961, the Mathewson Gold Medal of TMS in 1969,
and the Henry Marion Howe Medal of ASM International in 1973 and became a Fellow, ASM International, in 1976. In 1977, he
was awarded the Henri Sainte-Claire Deville Medal by the Societe Francaise de Metallurgie. In October 1978, he received the
Albert Sauveur Achievement Award from ASM INTERNATIONAL. In 1980, he received the John Chipman Award from AIME. In 1984, he
was elected an honorary member of the Japan Foundrymen’s Society and, in 1985, received the James Douglas Gold Medal from
the AIME. The Italian Metallurgical Association awarded him the Luigi Losana Gold Medal in 1986, and he was elected honorary
member of The Japan Iron and Steel Institute in 1987. He was elected a TMS Fellow in 1989. In 1990, he received the TMS Leadership
Award, and the Henry Marion Howe Medal and delivered the Edward DeMille Campbell Memorial Lecture of ASM INTERNATIONAL. In
1991, he received the Merton C. Flemings Award from Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Sigma Alpha Mu elected him a Distinguished
Life Member in 1992. In 1993, he received the TMS 1993 Bruce Chalmers Award and was elected Councillor of the Materials Research
Society. He was elected to the ASM INTERNATIONAL Board of Trustees in 1994. He received the Acta Metallurgica J. Herbert Holloman
Award in 1997 for “contributions to materials technology that have had major impact on society.” Also in 1997 he was appointed
David Turnbull Lecturer of the Materials Research Society for “outstanding contributions to understanding materials phenomena
and properties.” He received the Educator Award of TMS in 1999, received the FMS (Federation of Materials Societies) National
Materials Advancement Award in late 1999, and delivered the ASM and TMS Distinguished Lecture in Materials and Society in
2000. 相似文献
2.
Merton C. Flemings 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B》2001,32(2):197-204
Metallurgy/materials education will continue to evolve to encompass, in an intellectually unified way, the full range of structural
and functional materials. Computation, information, and other advanced sciences and technologies will assume increasing roles
in materials education, as will distance and continuing education. The advantages of the changes will be many ... to the graduates,
to emerging industries, and to the traditional metallurgical industries seeking productive, creative young engineers as employees.
The need for continuing change in our metallurgy/materials departments is now no less if we are to attract the best young
people into our field in the numbers and to best serve the needs of industry.
Merton C. Flemings received his S.B. degree from MIT in the Department of Metallurgy in 1951. He received his S.M. and Sc.D.
degrees, also in Metallurgy, in 1952 and 1954, respectively. From 1954 to 1956, he was employed as Metallurgist at Abex Corporation
(Mahwah, NJ), and in 1956 returned to MIT as Assistant Professor. He was appointed Associate Professor in 1961 and Professor
in 1969. In 1970, he was appointed Abex Professor of Metallurgy. In 1975, he became Ford Professor of Engineering, and, in
1981, Toyota Professor of Materials Processing. He established and was the first director of the Materials Processing Center
at MIT in 1979. He served as Head, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, from 1982 to 1995 and thereafter returned
to full-time teaching and research as Toyota Professor. He was Visiting Professor at Cambridge University in 1971, Tokyo University
in 1986, and Ecole des Mines in 1996. In 1999, he was appointed Co-Director of the Singapore-MIT Alliance, a major distance
educational and research collaboration among MIT and two Singaporean universities.
Professor Flemings’ research and teaching concentrate on engineering fundamentals of materials processing and on innovation
of materials processing operations. He is active nationally and internationally in strengthening the field of Materials Science
and Engineering and in delineation of new directions for the field. He is a member of the National Academy of Engineering
and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is author or co-author of 300 papers, 26 patents, and 2 books in the
fields of solidification science and engineering, foundry technology, and materials processing. He has worked closely with
industry and industrial problems throughout his professional career and currently serves on a number of corporate and technical
advisory boards.
He received the Simpson Gold Medal from the American Foundrymen’s Society in 1961, the Mathewson Gold Medal of TMS in 1969,
and the Henry Marion Howe Medal of ASM International in 1973 and became a Fellow, ASM International, in 1976. In 1977, he
was awarded the Henri Sainte-Claire Deville Medal by the Societe Francaise de Metallurgie. In October 1978, he received the
Albert Sauveur Achievement Award from ASM INTERNATIONAL. In 1980, he received the John Chipman Award from AIME. In 1984, he
was elected an honorary member of the Japan Foundrymen’s Society and, in 1985, received the James Douglas Gold Medal from
the AIME. The Italian Metallurgical Association awarded him the Luigi Losana Gold Medal in 1986, and he was elected honorary
member of The Japan Iron and Steel Institute in 1987. He was elected a TMS Fellow in 1989. In 1990, he received the TMS Leadership
Award, and the Henry Marion Howe Medal and delivered the Edward DeMille Campbell Memorial Lecture of ASM INTERNATIONAL. In
1991, he received the Merton C. Flemings Award from Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Sigma Alpha Mu elected him a Distinguished
Life Member in 1992. In 1993, he received the TMS 1993 Bruce Chalmers Award and was elected Councillor of the Materials Research
Society. He was elected to the ASM INTERNATIONAL Board of Trustees in 1994. He received the Acta Metallurgica J. Herbert Holloman
Award in 1997 for “contributions to materials technology that have had major impact on society.” Also in 1997 he was appointed
David Turnbull Lecturer of the Materials Research Society for “outstanding contributions to understanding materials phenomena
and properties.” He received the Educator Award of TMS in 1999, received the FMS (Federation of Materials Societies) National
Materials Advancement Award in late 1999, and delivered the ASM and TMS Distinguished Lecture in Materials and Society in
2000. 相似文献
3.
Ramana G. Reddy 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B》2003,34(2):137-152
The growing need to conserve energy and materials and prevent environmental pollution led to an increased demand for better
understanding of potential as well as existing processes. In this context, thermodynamic and transport modeling of materials
and processes provides a rapid and cost-effective means of conducting and minimizing the complexity of experimental investigations
and developing innovative and environmentally friendly metallurgical processes. This presentation concentrates on some fundamentals
on new technologies as extractive metallurgy of copper, lead, aluminum, and other nonferrous metals and processing of nanocomposites.
The newer routes of copper smelting and modeling of impurities in copper and lead slags and mattes are reviewed. The copper
smelting capacity increased by a factor of 10 during the last three decades, the smelting rate increased by a factor of 6,
and the process fuel equivalent decreased by a factor of 2. The a priori prediction, with no adjustable parameters, of impurity capacities of S and As in copper slags and S in lead slags, based
on the Reddy-Blander model, is reviewed. Excellent agreement between the model-predicted capacities data and laboratory experimental
and industrial data was observed. The model is an invaluable tool for optimization of process parameters in the efficient
removal of impurities from the nonferrous-metals smelting and refining processes.
A new in-situ processing technology for the production of a lightweight alloy matrix with ceramic particle reinforcements such as SiC in
aluminum alloy matrix composites by bubbling reactive gas is reviewed. Thermal plasma processing of a nanoscale aluminum alloy
matrix with TiC and TiN composites is discussed. The in-situ formed reinforcements are thermodynamically stable, and the composite particles are of uniform size. The optimum process
parameters for the production of composite powders by thermal plasma are discussed.
A low-temperature aluminum production and refining process using ionic liquids as electrolytes is reviewed. This newly developed
aluminum production process has many advantages over the current industrial process, and the energy consumption is closer
to the thermodynamic limit of aluminum production.
The Extraction and Processing Lecturer Award honors an outstanding scientific leader in the field of nonferrous extractive
metallurgy with an invitation to present a comprehensive lecture at the TMS Annual Meeting.
Dr. R.G. Reddy is an ACIPCO Chair Professor of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering; Adjunct Professor of Chemical Engineering;
and Associate Director of Center for Green Manufacturing at The University of Alabama (Tuscaloosa, AL). His academic and research
work experiences include: Professor and Chairman of the Department of Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering at University
of Nevada, Reno; Visiting Researcher at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley; Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay; and
Argonne National Laboratory, Chicago.
Professor Reddy has 20 years of teaching and research experience in the field of chemical and materials engineering. He obtained
his Ph.D. degree from the University of Utah. He has conducted projects involving thermodynamics and kinetics of metallurgical
reactions; pyrometallurgy, hydrometallurgy, plasma processing of metals, molten salt electrolysis, and waste processing.
He has published over 174 research articles in national and international journals and 7 books, including one undergraduate
student textbook in thermodynamics. He has presented numerous invited lectures and research presentations in the United States
and abroad. As an Endowed Chair Professor in the college of engineering and a major professor and supervisor, he advised and
worked with over 60 research scholars, students, and visiting scientists. Recently, his alma mater, the University of Utah,
recognized Dr. Reddy as a John Lewis Distinguished Lecturer of the year.
Dr. Reddy has served in many leadership positions within the College of Engineering, the University, and other national and
international organizations. He currently chairs the Extraction and Processing committee for TMS, and the Phase-equilibria
committee of ASM. In SME, Dr. Reddy serves on the Pyrometallurgy committee (past chair) and Education committee (past chair).
He was appointed as the University of Alabama Coordinator for the National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) and
NASA, and Council Member for the Alabama State Committee for Department of Defense-EPSCoR programs. He has received the “Service
Award” from TMS Light Metals. Dr. Reddy has received a Research Award from the J. Manufacturing Society and a Best Research
Paper—Recycling Award from the Light Metals Division, TMS. He is also a Fellow of ASM International. 相似文献
4.
Kenneth N. Han 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B》2003,34(6):757-767
Hydrometallurgical extraction of metals is an important widely practiced technology in the metallurgical industry for treating
both primary and secondary resources of valuable metals. Successful hydrometallurgical approaches to metal extraction require
a full understanding of a wide spectrum of scientific and engineering principles in many disciplines. These include solution
chemistry, electrochemistry, thermodynamics, kinetics, transport processes, and, frequently, biology. In this article, intricate
relationships among various disciplines influencing hydrometallurgical extraction are reviewed and analyzed with pertinent
examples. The effect of operating parameters on the overall extraction strategy are examined and discussed.
The Extraction and Processing Lecturer Award honors an outstanding scientific leader in the field of nonferrous extractive
metallurgy with an invitation to present a comprehensive lecture at the TMS Annual Meeting.
Kenneth N. Han is the Regents Distinguished Professor and Douglas W. Fuerstenau Professor in the Department of Materials &
Metallurgical Engineering at the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology (SDSM&T). He obtained his B.S. and M.S. degrees
from Seoul National University (SNU), an M.S. from the University of Illinois, and a Ph.D. from the University of California,
Berkeley. He was with the Department of Chemical Engineering, Monash University (Melbourne, Australia) from 1971 to 1980.
In 1981, he joined SDSM&T. He was head of the Department of Metallurgical Engineering from 1987 to 1994 and dean of the College
of Materials Science and Engineering from 1994 to 1999.
His research interests include hydrometallurgy, interfacial phenomena, metallurgical kinetics, solution chemistry, fine particle
recovery, and electrometallurgy. He has directed over 70 graduate students and postdoctorate researchers, published more than
150 papers in national and international journals, and presented more than 100 papers at international conferences. He is
an author of ten monographs and holds eight patents in the area of extractive metallurgy.
In 1987, he received the Presidential Professor Award from SDSM&T. In 1994, he received the Ernest L. Buckley Award, a South
Dakota State Governor’s Award, for his industrial research efforts. He received the Milton E. Wadsworth Award and the Arthur
F. Taggart Award from the Society of Mining, Metallurgical and Exploration in 1995. In 1997, he received the Distinguished
Alumni Award from the College of Engineering of SNU. He became an SME Distinguished Member in 1998. In 1998, he was awarded
the Excellence in Research by the SD Board of Regents. In 2000, he received the AIME Mineral Industry Education Award, and,
in 2002, the Robert H. Richards Award from AIME. In 2003, he received the 2003 Extraction and Processing Distinguished Lecturer
Award at the 132 TMS annual meeting in San Diego.
He was inducted into the National Academy of Engineering in 1996. He is a foreign member of the National Academy of Engineering
of Korea since 1998 and was inducted into the Korea Academy of Science and Technology in 1999. 相似文献
5.
Paul G. Shewmon R.F. Mehl Medalist 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A》1998,29(6):1535-1544
A chronological summary is given of the various types of grain boundary fracture found in metals. In each case, there is an
impurity that adsorbs at the new (fracture) surface being formed. For the case of Fe-P alloys, a quantitative argument can
show that adsorption of phosphorous on the free surface greatly reduces the barrier to void nucleation compared to that in
the absence of phosphorous. The same or larger reduction would appear for any other element, which adsorbs more strongly than
phosphorous and displaces it at the surface. Such an argument is shown to explain a great many cases of dimpled grain boundary
fracture in strong alloys undergoing creep or hydrogen attack. The reduction in surface energy can also lead to a smooth grain
boundary fracture (no void nucleation), in which diffusion of solute to the new surface limits crack growth. Numerous examples
of this are also discussed.
Dr. Shewmon studied metallurgical engineering at the University of Illinois (B.S. 1952) and Carnegie Institute of Technology
(Ph.D. 1955). His first job was at the Westinghouse Research Laboratory, where he studied thermal diffusion in alloys and
surface diffusion. In 1958, he moved to the Carnegie Institute of Technology, where he served as a professor until 1967. The
text “Diffusion in Solids” was published in 1963. An NSF Fellowship was used to study at Professor C. Wagner’s Max Planck
Institute (Goettingen, Germany) in 1963.
From 1968 to 1973, he was at Argonne National Laboratory, serving successively as Associate Director of the Metallurgy Division,
Associate Director of the EBR-2 Project, and Director of the Materials Science Division. The text “Transformations in Metals”
was published in 1969. Materials behavior in fast breeder reactors was the main theme of his work during this period.
He was the director of the Division of Materials Research at the National Science Foundation from 1973 to 1975. From 1975
to 1993, he was Professor at Ohio State University in the Department of Metallurgical Engineering (later Materials Science
and Engineering), serving as Chairman from 1975 to 1983. Research interests during this period were hard particle erosion
and hydrogen-induced cracking of steel (“hydrogen attack”). From 1977 to 1993 he served on the Advisory Committee on Reactor
Safety for the United States Nuclear Regulations Committee, serving as Chair for three of those years.
Dr. Shewmon was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 1979 and has been awarded the standing of Fellow in TMS,
ASM, ANS, and AAAS. He has received several outstanding paper awards (Noble-AIME, Raymond—TMS, Mathewson—TMS, and Howe—ASM).
He received the Distinguished Alumnus Award of the University of Illinois in 1981 and a Humboldt Foundation Senior Scientist
Prize in 1984.
The Edward DeMille Campbell Memorial Lecture was established in 1926 as an annual lecture in memory of and in recognition
of the outstanding scientific contributions to the metallurgical profession by a distinguished educator who was blind for
all but two years of his professional life. It recognizes demonstrated ability in metallurgical science and engineering.
The Institute of Metals Lecture was established in 1921, at which time the Institute of Metals Division was the only professional
division within the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers. It has been given annually since 1922 by distinguished
people from this country and abroad. Beginning in 1973 and thereafter, the person selected to deliver the lecture will be
known as the “Institute of Metals Division Lecturer and R.F. Mehl Medalist” for that year. 相似文献
6.
J. K. Brimacombe 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A》1999,30(8):1899-1912
As in any process, the laws of nature are at work in the continuous casting of metals. Heat spills down temperature gradients
under the watchful eye of Fourier, while molten metal moves in response to inertial and body forces governed by the Navier-Stokes
equations. Tensile strains develop in the solidifying shell subject to changing cooling conditions, the constitutive behavior
of the metal, compatibility, and the Prandtl-Reuss relations. Solutes segregate as thermodynamics compete with diffusion to
create a heterogeneous solid from a homogeneous liquid. The challenge to the process engineer is to harness these laws to
continuously cast a metal section that is free of cracks, has minimal macrosegregation, and has the desired shape. Confronted
with the demands of production, cost containment, and an educationally challenged workforce, the obstacles are very real.
One response to the challenge is to move knowledge to the shop floor, where wealth is created, through expert systems to educate
the workforce and through artificial intelligence to make the continuous casting process “smart.” Harnessing knowledge for
wealth creation, and profitability, is the real challenge.
The Edward DeMille Campbell Memorial Lecture was established in 1926 as an annual lecture in memory of and in recognition
of the outstanding scientific contributions to the metallurgical profession by a distinguished educator who was blind for
all but two years of his professional life. It recognizes demonstrated ability in metallurgical science and engineering.
Dr. J. Keith Brimacombe delivered the 1996 Edward DeMille Campbell Memorial Lecture at the ASM-TMS Meeting in Cincinnati,
OH. The written lecture was nearly complete at the time of his untimely passing on December 16, 1997 and has been finished
and submitted by his colleague, Professor I.V. Samarasekera.
On October 1, 1997, J. Keith Brimacombe was appointed the first President and Chief Executive Officer of the Canada Foundation
for Innovation. This enterprise, newly established by the Federal Government of Canada, was provided with one billion dollars
of funding with the objective of strengthening the nation’s research infrastructure in universities and hospitals. Sadly,
Dr. Brimacombe was able to serve only 3 months of his term and succumbed to a massive heart attack on December 16, 1997, at
the age of 54.
Dr. Brimacombe held the Alcan Chair in Materials Process Engineering, The Centre for Metallurgical Process Engineering at
the University of British Columbia, prior to his appointment with the Canada Foundation for Innovation. He was born in Nova
Scotia, raised in Alberta, and received his undergraduate education at UBC, obtaining a B.A.Sc. (Hons.) in 1966. With the
support of a Commonwealth Fellowship, he traveled to England and studied under one of the great metallurgical thermochemists
of this century, F.D. Richardson, F.R.S., at Imperial College of Science and Technology in the University of London, where
he received a Ph.D. in 1970. Subsequently, he was awarded the D.Sc. (Eng.) in 1986 by the University of London and an Honorary
Doctorate of Engineering degree in 1994 by the Colorado School of Mines. He returned to the University of British Columbia
in 1970 to establish courses and a research program in metallurgical process engineering. He remained at UBC, achieving the
rank of Professor in 1979, Stelco Professor of Process Metallurgy (a chair endowed by Stelco) in 1980, Stelco/NSERC Professor
(a chair endowed by Stelco and NSERC) in 1985, and the Alcan Chair in 1992. One of the finest metallurgical engineers on the
world stage in this century, Dr. Brimacombe pioneered the application of mathematical models and industrial and laboratory
measurements, to shed light on complex metallurgical processes spanning both the ferrous and nonferrous industries during
his 27 year career at the University of British Columbia. For his groundbreaking research, he earned the reputation of being
one of the most innovative intellectual giants in the field, for which he earned global recognition.
During his tenure at UBC, he built a large collaborative research group in metallurgical process engineering consisting of
about 70 faculty, graduate students, research engineers, and technicians. Much of the research was conducted in close collaboration
with Canadian companies such as Stelco, Hatch Associates, Algoma Steel, Western Canada Steel, Sidbec-Dosco, Ivaco, Cominco,
Noranda, Inco, Alcan, Domtar, Canadian Liquid Air, and Liquid Carbonic. The thrust of the research was the development and
improvement of metallurgical processes, such as continuous casting of steel, flash smelting of lead and copper converting,
rotary kilns, and micro-structural engineering of steel and aluminum, and DC casting processes. This body of work led to 300
publications and nine patents as well as two books. In 1985, in cooperation with faculty colleagues, he founded the Centre
for Metallurgical Process Engineering at UBC and was named its Director. The purpose of the Centre is to strengthen the interdisciplinary
approach to metallurgical process research and to broaden the field of application to materials other than metals. For this
body of research, he was awarded the B.C. Science and Engineering Gold Medal (1985) and the Ernest C. Manning Prize (1987)
and, before that, the E.W.R. Steacie Memorial Fellowship (1979) from NSERC. He also received the following awards: TMS-AIME
Charles Herty Award (1973 and 1987), AMS Marcus A. Grossmann Award (1976), TMS Extractive Metallurgy Science Award (1979,
1987, and 1989), ISS John Chipman Award (1979, 1985, and 1996), TMS Champion H. Mathewson Gold Medal (1980), ISS Robert Woolston
Hunt Silver Medal (1980, 1983, and 1993), ASM Henry Marion Howe Medal (1980 and 1985), TMS Extractive Metallurgy Technology
Award (1983 and 1991), the Williams Prize of the Metals Society (UK) (1983), the ISS Mechanical Working and Steel Processing
Conference Meritorious Award (1986 and 1996), the ASM Canadian Council Lectureship (1986), and the CIM Metallurgical Society
Alcan Award (1988). In 1981, he delivered the Arnold Markey Lecture to the Steel Bar Mill Association. In 1987, he was made
a Distinguished Member of the Iron and Steel Society and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. In 1988, he became a Fellow
of the CIM and, in 1989, he delivered the TMS Extractive Metallurgy Lecture while being awarded Fellowship in TMS. Also in
1989, he was awarded the Izaak Walton Killam Prize for Engineering by the Canada Council, joined the Board of Directors of
Sherritt Gordon Ltd., received the Bell Canada Corporate-Higher Education Award and was appointed an Officer of the Order
of Canada. In 1990, he received the Meritorious Achievement Award of the Association of Professional Engineers of British
Columbia and a UBC Killam Research Prize. In 1992, he was honored with the Commemorative Medal for the 125th Anniversary of
Canadian Confederation and, in 1993, delivered the Howe Memorial Lecture of the Iron and Steel Society and became Fellow of
the Canadian Academy of Engineering. In 1994, he presented the D.K.C. MacDonald Memorial Lecture; and in 1995, he was the
Inland Steel Lecturer at Northwestern University and received the Ablett Prize of the Institute of Materials. In 1996, he
delivered the ASM Edward DeMille Campbell Memorial Lecture and, in 1997, received the AIME Distinguished Service, and he was
elected a Foreign Associate of the National Academy of Engineering. In June 1997, he received Canada’s highest scientific
honor, the Canada Gold Medal in Science and Engineering from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.
In 1998, Dr. Brimacombe was posthumously awarded the Benjamin Fairless Award by the AIME and the Inco Medal by the CIM at
their centennlal celebration.
Beyond the quest to generate knowledge and train young people, he was driven by the desire to see the fruits of his research
implemented in industry. Not satisfied that publications in peer-reviewed journals are an effective means of reaching out
to the shop floor, where knowledge implementation creates wealth, he worked tirelessly at the University-Industry interface
to make the transfer of knowledge to industry a reality. A gifted speaker, he was renowned for his ability to translate complex
research results to changes that are required to the process for improved quality and/or productivity. Thus, he was sought
after by the global metallurgical industry and presented over 50 courses in companies in every continent. A course on continuous
casting of steel offered annually in Vancouver, under his directorship, attracted participants from around the world. He seized
the opportunities provided by the revolution in computer technology to help further the transfer of knowledge, and since the
early 1980s drove the development of user-friendly mathematical models as a means of transferring research results to industry.
Brimacombe was also instrumental in developing “smart” systems for the transfer of knowledge and spearheaded the development
of an expert system for diagnosing defects in steel billets, which is being marketed commercially. A recent project involving
Canadian companies is the development of a “Smart Process,” in which knowledge is made to work in the process through the
use of an on-line expert system and sensors.
He gave unreservedly of his time to professional societies, which are a vehicle for knowledge transfer and professional development
of materials engineers. He was the only professional who was President of the three major societies serving materials engineers
in North America: TMS-CIM in Canada in 1985, TMS-AIME in 1993, and ISS-AIME in 1995. His enthusiasm for professional societies
was infectious and has led to the initiation of a very dynamic student chapter at UBC.
He served on the Killam Research Fellowships Committee of the Canada Council from 1982 to 1985, where he initiated the Killam
Prize in Engineering and worked on other committees of the Canadian Council of Professional Engineers, the Science Council
of British Columbia, and the Canadian Steel Industry Research Association. He served on the Boards of the ISS and TMS in the
United States. He served on numerous committees in these societies, including Joint Commission and Board of Review of Metallurgical
Transactions, Book Publishing Committee, Awards Committee, Extractive Metallurgy Sub-committee, Nominating Committee, and
Long Range Planning Committee. In 1989, he assumed responsibilities as Founding Chairman of the TMS Extraction and Processing
Division, in 1993–4 was TMS President, and in 1994–5 was Founding President of the TMS Foundation. In 1990, he was named as
an Eminent Scientist to the Board of Directors of the Ontario Centre for Materials Research. In 1995, he was Chairman of the
Science Policy Committee of the Royal Society of Canada and was a member of the National Materials Advisory Board (united
States). In 1996, he was elected Vice President of the Academy of Science of the Royal Society of Canada and was appointed
to the Board of the United Engineering Trust. He served on the Board of Trustees of the AIME since 1993; had he lived, he
would have become President of the AIME in 1999. 相似文献
7.
The challenge of quality in continuous casting processes 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
J. K. Brimacombe 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B》1999,30(4):553-566
As in any process, the laws of nature are at work in the continuous casting of metals. Heat spills down temperature gradients
under the watchful eye of Fourier, while molten metal moves in response to inertial and body forces governed by the Navier-Stokes
equations. Tensile strains develop in the solidifying shell subject to changing cooling conditions, the constitutive behavior
of the metal, compatibility, and the Prandtl-Reuss relations. Solutes segregate as thermodynamics compete with diffusion to
create a heterogeneous solid from a homogeneous liquid. The challenge to the process engineer is to harness these laws to
continuously cast a metal section that is free of cracks, has minimal macrosegregation, and has the desired shape. Confronted
with the demands of production, cost containment, and an educationally challenged workforce, the obstacles are very real.
One response to the challenge is to move knowledge to the shop floor, where wealth is created, through expert systems to educate
the workforce and through artificial intelligence to make the continuous casting process “smart.” Harnessing knowledge for
wealth creation, and profitability, is the real challenge.
The Edward DeMille Campbell Memorial Lecture was established in 1926 as an annual lecture in memory of and in recognition
of the outstanding scientific contributions to the metallurgical profession by a distinguished educator who was blind for
all but two years of his professional life. It recognizes demonstrated ability in metallurgical science and engineering.
Dr. J. Keith Brimacombe delivered the 1996 Edward DeMille Campbell Memorial Lecture at the ASM-TMS Meeting in Cincinnati,
OH. The written lecture was nearly complete at the time of his untimely passing on December 16, 1997 and has been finished
and submitted by his colleague, Professor I.V. Samarasekera.
On October 1, 1997, J. Keith Brimacombe was appointed the first President and Chief Executive Officer of the Canada Foundation
for Innovation. This enterprise, newly established by the Federal Government of Canada, was provided with one billion dollars
of funding with the objective of strengthening the nation’s research infrastructure in universities and hospitals. Sadly,
Dr. Brimacombe was able to serve only 3 months of his term and succumbed to a massive heart attack on December 16, 1997, at
the age of 54.
Dr. Brimacombe held the Alcan Chair in Materials Process Engineering, The Centre for Metallurgical Process Engineering at
the University of British Columbia, prior to his appointment with the Canada Foundation for Innovation. He was born in Nova
Scotia, raised in Alberta, and received his undergraduate education at UBC, obtaining a B.A.Sc. (Hons.) in 1966. With the
support of a Commonwealth Fellowship, he traveled to England and studied under one of the great metallurgical thermochemists
of this century, F.D. Richardson, F.R.S., at Imperial College of Science and Technology in the University of London, where
he received a Ph.D. in 1970. Subsequently, he was awarded the D.Sc. (Eng.) in 1986 by the University of London and an Honorary
Doctorate of Engineering degree in 1994 by the Colorado School of Mines. He returned to the University of British Columbia
in 1970 to establish courses and a research program in metallurgical process engineering. He remained at UBC, achieving the
rank of Professor in 1979, Stelco Professor of Process Metallurgy (a chair endowed by Stelco) in 1980, Stelco/NSERC Professor
(a chair endowed by Stelco and NSERC) in 1985, and the Alcan Chair in 1992. One of the finest metallurgical engineers on the
world stage in this century, Dr. Brimacombe pioneered the application of mathematical models and industrial and laboratory
measurements, to shed light on complex metallurgical processes spanning both the ferrous and nonferrous industries during
his 27 year career at the University of British Columbia. For his groundbreaking research, he earned the reputation of being
one of the most innovative intellectual grants in the field, for which he earned global recognition.
During his tenure at UBC, he built a large collaborative research group in metallurgical process engineering consisting of
about 70 faculty, graduate students, research engineers, and technicians. Much of the research was conducted in close collaboration
with Canadian companies such as Stelco, Hatch Associates, Algoma Steel, Western Canada Steel, Sidbec-Dosco, Ivaco, Cominco.
Noranda, Inco, Alcan, Domtar, Canadian Liquid Air, and Liquid Carbonic. The thrust of the research was the development and
improvement of metallurgical processes, such as continuous casting of steel, flash smelting of lead and copper converting,
rotary kilns, and microstructural engineering of steel and aluminum, and DC casting processes. This body of work led to 300
publications and nine patents as well as two books. In 1985, in cooperation with faculty colleagues, he founded the Centre
for Metallurgical Process Engineering at UBC and was named its Director. The purpose of the Centre is to strengthen the interdisciplinary
approach to metallurgical process research and to broaden the field of application to materials other than metals. For this
body of research, he was awarded the B.C. Science and Engineering Gold Medal (1985) and the Ernest C. Manning Prize (1987)
and, before that, the E.W.R. Steacie Memorial Fellowship (1979) from NSERC. He also received the following awards: TMS-AIME
Charles Herty Award (1973 and 1987). AMS Marcus A. Grossmann Award (1976), TMS Extractive Metallurgy Science Award (1979,
1987, and 1989), ISS John Chipman Award (1979, 1985, and 1996), TMS Champion H. Mathewson Gold Medal (1980), ISS Robert Woolston
Hunt Silver Medal (1980, 1983, and 1993), ASM Henry Marion Howe Medal (1980 and 1985), TMS Extractive Metallurgy Technology
Award (1983 and 1991), the Williams Prize of the Metals Society (UK) (1983), the ISS Mechanical Working and Steel Processing
Conference Meritorious Award (1986 and 1996), the ASM Canadian Council Lectureship (1986), and the CIM Metallurgical Society
Alcan Award (1988). In 1981, he delivered the Arnold Markey Lecture to the Steel Bar Mill Association. In 1987, he was made
a Distinguished Member of the Iron and Steel Society and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. In 1988, he became a Fellow
of the CIM and, in 1989, he delivered the TMS Extractive Metallurgy Lecture while being awarded Fellowship in TMS. Also in
1989, he was awarded the Izaak Walton Killam Prize for Engineering by the Canada Council, joined the Board of Directors of
Sherritt Gordon Ltd., received the Bell Canada Corporate Higher Education Award and was appointed an Officer of the Order
of Canada. In 1990, he received the Meritorious Achievement Award of the Association of Professional Engineers of British
Columbia and a UBC Killam Research Prize. In 1992, he was honored with the Commemorative Medal for the 125th Anniversary of
Canadian Confederation and, in 1993, delivered the Howe Memorial Lecture of the Iron and Steel Society and became Fellow of
the Canadian Academy of Engineering. In 1994, he presented the D.K.C. MacDonald Memorial Lecture; and in 1995, he was the
Inland Steel Lecturer at Northwestern University and received the Ablett Prize of the Institute of Materials. In 1996, he
delivered the ASM Edward DeMille Campbell Memorial Lecture and, in 1997, received the AIME Distinguished Service, and he was
elected a Foreign Associate of the National Academy of Engineering. In June 1997, he received Canada’s highest scientific
honor, the Canada Gold Medal in Science and Engineering from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.
In 1998, Dr. Brimacombe was posthumously awarded the Benjamin Fairless Award by the AIME and the Inco Medal by the CIM at
their centennial celebration.
Beyond the quest to generate knowledge and train young people, he was driven by the desire to see the fruits of his research
implemented in industry. Not satisfied that publications in peer-reviewed journals are an effective means of reaching out
to the shop floor, where knowledge implementation creates wealth, he worked tirelessly at the University-Industry interface
to make the transfer of knowledge to industry a reality. A gifted speaker, he was renowned for his ability to translate complex
research results to changes that are required to the process for improved quality and or productivity. Thus, he was sought
after by the global metallurgical industry and presented over 50 courses in companies in every continent. A course on continuous
casting of steel offered annually in Vancouver, under his directorship, attracted participants from around the world. He seized
the opportunities provided by the revolution in computer technology to help further the transfer of knowledge, and since the
early 1980s drove the development of user-friendly mathematical models as a means of transferring research results to industry.
Brimacombe was also instrumental in developing “smart” systems for the transfer of knowledge and spearheaded the development
of an expert system for diagnosing defects in steel billets, which is being marketed commercially. A recent project involving
Canadian companies is the development of a “Smart Process,” in which knowledge is made to work in the process through the
use of an on-line expert system and sensors.
He gave unreservedly of his time to professional societies, which are a vehicle for knowledge transfer and professional development
of materials engineers. He was the only professional who was President of the three major societies serving materials engineers
in North America: TMS-CIM in Canada in 1985, TMS-AIME in 1993, and ISS-AIME in 1995. His enthusiasm for professional societies
was infectious and has led to the initiation of a very dynamic student chapter at UBC.
He served on the Killam Research Fellowships Committee of the Canada Council from 1982 to 1985, where he initiated the Killam
Prize in Engineering and worked on other committees of the Canadian Council of Professional Engineers, the Science Council
of British Columbia, and the Canadian Steel Industry Research Association. He served on the Boards of the ISS and TMS in the
United States. He served on numerous committees in these societies, including Joint Commission and Board of Review of Metallurgical
Transactions, Book Publishing Committee, Awards Committee, Extractive Metallurgy Sub-committee, Nominating Committee, and
Long Range Planning Committee. In 1989, he assumed responsibilities as Founding Chairman of the TMS Extraction and Processing
Division, in 1993–4 was TMS President, and in 1994–5 was Founding President of the TMS Foundation. In 1990, he was named as
an Eminent Scientist to the Board of Directors of the Ontario Centre for Materials Research. In 1995, he was Chairman of the
Science Policy Committee of the Royal Society of Canada and was a member of the National Materials Advisory Board (United
States). In 1996, he was elected Vice President of the Academy of Science of the Royal Society of Canada and was appointed
to the Board of the United Engineering Trust. He served on the Board of Trustees of the AIME since 1993; had he lived, he
would have become President of the AIME in 1999. 相似文献
8.
R. J. Fruehan 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B》2009,40(2):123-133
The international steel community is faced with the challenge of developing processes that will make steel production more
sustainable in the future. Specifically, processes that produce less CO2 and less net waste materials and emissions and that consume less energy are required. This article outlines where energy
consumption and CO2 emissions are high and can be reduced. Reductions can be achieved by incremental improvements to existing processes or by
a “break-through innovative process”; both strategies are examined. Since most of the energy consumption and CO2 generation occur in ironmaking, research in this area is emphasized. Research on controlling the cohesive zone in the blast
furnace, improving the final stages of reduction in direct reduction processes, the use of biomass, and other innovative processes
for ironmaking are reviewed. In oxygen steelmaking, improved postcombustion (PC) to allow for more scrap melting is examined.
Postcombustion and slag foaming in the electric arc furnace (EAF) in order to reduce energy is reviewed.
R.J. Fruehan is currently the U. S. Steel University Professor at Carnegie Mellon University. He received his B.S. and Ph.D.
degrees from the University of Pennsylvania and was an NSF Scholar at Imperial College, University of London. Dr. Fruehan
organized the Center for Iron and Steelmaking Research, and is currently the Co-Director. He was Director of the Sloan Steel
Industry Study, which examines the critical issues impacting a company’s competitiveness and involves numerous faculty at
several universities from 1992 to 2002. Dr. Fruehan has authored over 250 papers, two books on steelmaking technologies, co-authored
a book on managing for competitiveness, and is the holder of six patents. He has received several awards, including the 1970
and 1982 Hunt Medal (AIME), the 1982 and 1991 John Chipman Medal (AIME), 1989 Mathewson Gold Medal (TMS-AIME), the 1993 Albert
Sauveur Award (ASM International), the 1976 Gilcrist Medal (Medals Society UK), the 1996 Howe Memorial Lecture (ISS of AIME),
the 1999 Benjamin Fairless Award (ISS of AIME), the Brimacombe Prize (ISS, TMS, CSM) (2000), the 2004 Bessemer Gold Medal
(Institute of Materials, Minerals & Mining (UK); an IR100 Award for the invention of the oxygen sensor and the TMS Science
Award (2008). He is a Distinguished Member of the Iron and Steel Society, an Honorary Member of AIME, an Honorary Member
of the Iron and Steel Institute of Japan and served as President of the Iron and Steel Society of AIME from 1990 to 1991.
He was elected a Member of the National Academy of Engineers in 1999. 相似文献
9.
Grain boundary cracking 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Paul G. Shewmon 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B》1998,29(3):509-518
A chronological summary is given of the various types of grain boundary fracture found in metals. In each case, there is an
impurity that adsorbs at the new (fracture) surface being formed. For the case of Fe-P alloys, a quantitative argument can
show that adsorption of phosphorous on the free surface greatly reduces the barrier to void nucleation compared to that in
the absence of phosphorous. The same or larger reduction would appear for any other element, which adsorbs more strongly than
phosphorous and displaces it at the surface. Such an argument is shown to explain a great many cases of dimpled grain boundary
fracture in strong alloys undergoing creep or hydrogen attack. The reduction in surface energy can also lead to a smooth grain
boundary fracture (no void nucleation), in which diffusion of solute to the new surface limits crack growth. Numerous examples
of this are also discussed.
Dr. Shewmon studied metallurgical engineering at the University of Illinois (B.S. 1952) and Carnegie Institute of Technology
(Ph.D. 1955). His first job was at the Westinghouse Research Laboratory, where he studied thermal diffusion in alloys and
surface diffusion. In 1958, he moved to the Carnegie Institute of Technology, where he served as a professor until 1967. The
text “Diffusion in Solids” was published in 1963. An NSF Fellowship was used to study at Professor C. Wagner’s Max Planck
Institute (Goettingen, Germany) in 1963.
From 1968 to 1973, he was at Argonne National Laboratory, serving successively as Associate Director of the Metallurgy Division,
Associate Director of the EBR-2 Project, and Director of the Materials Science Division. The text “Transformations in Metals”
was published in 1969. Materials behavior in fast breeder reactors was the main theme of his work during this period.
He was the director of the Division of Materials Research at the National Science Foundation from 1973 to 1975. From 1975
to 1993, he was Professor at Ohio State University in the Department of Metallurgical Engineering (later Materials Science
and Engineering), serving as Chairman from 1975 to 1983. Research interests during this period were hard particle erosion
and hydrogen-induced cracking of steel (“hydrogen attack”). From 1977 to 1993 he served on the Advisory Committee on Reactor
Safety for the United States Nuclear Regulations Committee, serving as Chair for three of those years.
Dr. Shewmon was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 1979 and has been awarded the standing of Fellow in TMS,
ASM, ANS, and AAAS. He has received several outstanding paper awards (Noble-AIME, Raymond—TMS, Mathewson—TMS, and Howe—ASM).
He received the Distinguished Alumnus Award of the University of Illinois in 1981 and a Humboldt Foundation Senior Scientist
Prize in 1984.
The Edward DeMille Campbell Memorial Lecture was established in 1926 as an annual lecture in memory of and in recognition
of the outstanding scientific contributions to the metallurgical profession by a distinguished educator who was blind for
all but two years of his professional life. It recognizes demonstrated ability in metallurgical science and engineering. 相似文献
10.
Mechanical properties of thin films 总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20
William D. Nix 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A》1989,20(11):2217-2245
The mechanical properties of thin films on substrates are described and studied. It is shown that very large stresses may
be present in the thin films that comprise integrated circuits and magnetic disks and that these stresses can cause deformation
and fracture to occur. It is argued that the approaches that have proven useful in the study of bulk structural materials
can be used to understand the mechanical behavior of thin film materials. Understanding the mechanical properties of thin
films on substrates requires an understanding of the stresses in thin film structures as well as a knowledge of the mechanisms
by which thin films deform. The fundamentals of these processes are reviewed. For a crystalline film on a nondeformable substrate,
a key problem involves the movement of dislocations in the film. An analysis of this problem provides insight into both the
formation of misfit dislocations in epitaxial thin films and the high strengths of thin metal films on substrates. It is demonstrated
that the kinetics of dislocation motion at high temperatures are expecially important to the understanding of the formation
of misfit dislocations in heteroepitaxial structures. The experimental study of mechanical properties of thin films requires
the development and use of nontraditional mechanical testing techniques. Some of the techniques that have been developed recently
are described. The measurement of substrate curvature by laser scanning is shown to be an effective way of measuring the biaxial
stresses in thin films and studying the biaxial deformation properties at elevated temperatures. Submicron indentation testing
techniques, which make use of the Nanoindenter, are also reviewed. The mechanical properties that can be studied using this
instrument are described, including hardness, elastic modulus, and time-dependent deformation properties. Finally, a new testing
technique involving the deflection of microbeam samples of thin film materials made by integrated circuit manufacturing methods
is described. It is shown that both elastic and plastic properties of thin film materials can be measured using this technique.
The Institute of Metals Lecture was established in 1921, at which time the Institute of Metals Division was the only professional
division within the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers Society. It has been given annually since 1922
by distinguished men from this country and abroad. Beginning in 1973 and thereafter, the person selected to deliver the lecture
will be known as the “Institute of Metals Division Lecturer and R.F. Mehl Medalist” for that year.
WILLIAM D. NIX, Professor, obtained his B.S. degree in Metallurgical Engineering from San Jose State University, San Jose,
CA, and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Metallurgical Engineering and Materials Science, respectively, from Stanford University,
Stanford, CA. He joined the faculty at Stanford in 1963 and was appointed Professor in 1972. In 1964, Professor Nix received
the Western Electric Fund Award for Excellence in Engineering Instruction and, in 1970, the Bradley Stoughton Teaching Award
of ASM. He received the 1979 Champion Herbert Mathewson Award and, in 1988, was the Institute of Metals Lecturer and recipient
of the Robert Franklin Mehl Award of TMS-AIME. He was elected Fellow of the American Society for Metals in 1978 and elected
Fellow of TMS-AIME in 1988. He also received a Distinguished Alumnus Award from San Jose State University in 1980, and he
served as Chairman of the 1985 Gordon Conference on Physical Metallurgy. In 1987, he was elected to the National Academy of
Engineering. In 1966, he participated in the Ford Foundation's “Residence in Engineering Practice” program as Assistant to
the Director of Technology at the Stellite Division of Union Carbide Corporation. From 1968 to 1970, Professor Nix was Director
of Stanford's Center for Materials Research. Professor Nix is engaged in research on the mechanical properties of solids.
He is principally concerned with the relation between structure and mechanical properties of materials in both thin film and
bulk form. He is coauthor of about 190 publications in these and related fields. Professor Nix teaches courses on dislocation
theory and mechanical properties of materials. He is coauthor of “The Principles of Engineering Materials,” published in 1973
by Prentice-Hall, Incorporated, Englewood Cliffs, NJ. 相似文献
11.
Robert D. Pehlke 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B》2002,33(4):519-541
The historical development of solidification modeling is traced, as applied to solidification processing. Clearly, the growth
of this technology followed the computer explosion, particularly with regard to hardware. However, universities and government
laboratories made substantial contributions in the software area, particularly in removing roadblocks to the further development
of the technology and by creative examples. The commercial software houses have utilized these leading-edge developments,
a practice continued and expanding today. Heat-transfer analyses by computer were initiated by utilizing the analog computer,
which appeared to be a competing technology, but by the early 1960s, the digital computer had become the winner in larger-scale
computation. A number of benchmark achievements followed over the next several decades. The evolution of this technology is
documented, including predictions of solidification microstructure and resulting material properties. Future developments
are projected.
This lecture was presented to honor Edward DeMille Campbell (University of Michigan, Class of 1886), born in 1863, who was
appointed Assistant Professor of Metallurgy in 1890. Dr. Campbell brought a strong interest in the study of the constitution
of metals and alloys to the University of Michigan. In 1892, during a study of the composition of steel, he lost his eyesight
in a laboratory explosion. Within five days, he returned to the University, and resumed his teaching and research. Over the
next 30 years, he published 72 research papers, and developed a laboratory course in metallography. In 1924, working under
the direction of Professor Campbell, William Fink discovered a new, tetragonal form of iron (martensite) in the first significant
application of a new tool, X-ray diffraction, to physical metallurgy. It was these experiments that established the beginning
of a strong tradition in physical metallurgy at the University of Michigan. In 1898, Campbell led the effort to establish
Chemical Engineering at Michigan, becoming Professor of Chemical Engineering and Analytical Chemistry in 1902. In 1914, Campbell
was appointed Director of the University’s Chemical Laboratory and Professor of Chemistry. Following his death in 1925, the
American Society for Metals established this annual award in his name.
The Edward DeMille Campbell Memorial Lecture was established in 1926 as an annual lecture in memory of and in recognition
of the outstanding scientific contributions to the metallurgical profession by a distinguished educator who was blind for
all but two years of his professional life. It recognizes demonstrated ability in metallurgical science and engineering.
Robert D. Pehlke studied at the University of Michigan, B.S.E. (Met. Eng.) 1955, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, S.M. (Met.) 1958,
and Sc.D. (Met.) 1960, and at the Technical Institute, Aachen, as a Fulbright Fellow, 1956–57. He joined the faculty of the
University of Michigan as Assistant Professor in February 1960, and was appointed Associate Professor in June 1963 and full
Professor in June 1968. In May 1973, he was named Chairman of the Department of Materials and Metallurgical Engineering. In
June 1978 and 1983, he was reappointed Department Chairman and served until June 1984. In 1994, he was Visiting Professor
at Tohoku University (Sendai, Japan).
He is a member of AIME and ASM, and has served on numerous divisional and award committees within these societies. He has
served on the Technical Divisions Board (1982–84), as Secretary of the ASM Academy for Metals and Materials Committee, and
in 1976 was named a Fellow of the Society. In 1964, he co-edited the ASM seminar volume on Computers in Metallurgy. He has
served as Chairman of the Process Technology Division and as a Director of the ISS-AIME. In 1980, he was named a Distinguished
Life Member of the ISS. In 1976, he received the Science Award Gold Medal of the Extractive Metallurgy Division of TMS-AIME.
In 1983, he was named a Fellow of TMS. He was chairman of the former AIME-ISS Division Publications Committee. He served as
chairman of the Editorial Board for the AIME Monograph Series on Oxygen Steelmaking. In 1980, he presented the Howe Memorial
Lecture on “Steelmaking—The Jet Age.”
In 1991–92, he was the Krumb Lecturer of the Metallurgical Society. In 1980, he was named a Case Institute Centennial Scholar
and the Van Horn Distinguished Lecturer at Case Western Reserve University. He has lectured widely internationally, and at
technical conferences, universities, corporations, and technical society chapters, including presenting a number of keynote,
invited, and honorary lectures.
He was National President of Alpha Sigma Mu and a member of Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Xi, and the New York Academy of Sciences. He
is also a member of the American Society for Engineering Education and the American Foundry Society. He has held memberships
in the Iron and Steel Institute of London, the Iron and Steel Institute of Japan, and the Verein Deutscher Eisenhuttenleute.
He is a registered professional engineer in the State of Michigan. Dr. Pehlke has served as Foundry Educational Foundation
Professor at The University of Michigan for 17 years.
Professor Pehlke has authored or co-authored over 300 publications, including editing, authoring, or co-authoring 11 books.
His text Unit Processes of Extractive Metallurgy has been widely used throughout the world. He co-authored Continuous Casting—Design and Operations, which is Volume 4 of the ISS-AIME series. He has won seven American Foundry Society Best Paper awards.
In 1963, Dr. Pehlke published an ASM pioneering paper first describing computer modeling of continuous casting of steel. In
1964, he continued this work in conjunction with McLouth Steel Corporation, which had just installed the first slab casting
machine for steel in the United States. In 1968, he, with the support of the Heat Transfer Committee of the American Foundry
Society, initiated the first university research program in North America on computer modeling of the solidification of shaped
castings.
His early professional employment included three summers each with General Motors Research Laboratories and the Ford Scientific
Laboratory. He has consulted extensively on a wide range of metallurgical subjects, principally with ferrous and nonferrous
metal producers and their suppliers.
His research has covered a broad range of metallurgical topics with an emphasis on high-temperature physical chemistry of
metallurgical systems, modeling of solidification of metals, and computer applications in metallurgy. 相似文献
12.
Robert D. Pehlke 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A》2002,33(8):2251-2273
The historical development of solidification modeling is traced, as applied to solidification processing. Clearly, the growth
of this technology followed the computer explosion, particularly with regard to hardware. However, universities and government
laboratories made substantial contributions in the software area, particularly in removing roadblocks to the further development
of the technology and by creative examples. The commercial software houses have utilized these leading-edge developments,
a practice continued and expanding today. Heat-transfer analyses by computer were initiated by utilizing the analog computer,
which appeared to be a competing technology, but by the early 1960s, the digital computer had become the winner in larger-scale
computation. A number of benchmark achievements followed over the next several decades. The evolution of this technology is
documented, including predictions of solidification microstructure and resulting material properties. Future developments
are projected.
This lecture was presented to honor Edward DeMille Campbell (University of Michigan, Class of 1886), born in 1863, who was
appointed Assistant Professor of Metallurgy in 1890. Dr. Campbell brought a strong interest in the study of the constitution
of metals and alloys to the University of Michigan. In 1892, during a study of the composition of steel, he lost his eyesight
in a laboratory explosion. Within five days, he returned to the University, and resumed his teaching and research. Over the
next 30 years, he published 72 research papers, and developed a laboratory course in metallography. In 1924, working under
the direction of Professor Campbell, William Fink discovered a new, tetragonal form of iron (martensite) in the first significant
application of a new tool, X-ray diffraction, to physical metallurgy. It was these experiments that established the beginning
of a strong tradition in physical metallurgy at the University of Michigan. In 1898, Campbell led the effort to establish
Chemical Engineering at Michigan, becoming Professor of Chemical Engineering and Analytical Chemistry in 1902. In 1914, Campbell
was appointed Director of the University’s Chemical Laboratory and Professor of Chemistry. Following his death in 1925, the
American Society for Metals established this annual award in his name.
The Edward DeMille Campbell Memorial Lecture was established in 1926 as an annual lecture in memory of and in recognition
of the outstanding scientific contributions to the metallurgical profession by a distinguished educator who was blind for
all but two years of his professional life. It recognizes demonstrated ability in metallurgical science and engineering.
Robert D. Pehlke studied at the University of Michigan, B.S.E. (Met. Eng.) 1955, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, S.M. (Met.) 1958,
and Sc.D. (Met.) 1960, and at the Technical Institute, Aachen, as a Fulbright Fellow, 1956–57. He joined the faculty of the
University of Michigan as Assistant Professor in February 1960, and was appointed Associate Professor in June 1963 and full
Professor in June 1968. In May 1973, he was named Chairman of the Department of Materials and Metallurgical Engineering. In
June 1978 and 1983, he was reappointed Department Chairman and served until June 1984. In 1994, he was Visiting Professor
at Tohoku University (Sendai, Japan).
He is a member of AIME and ASM, and has served on numerous divisional and award committees within these societies. He has
served on the Technical Divisions Board (1982–84), as Secretary of the ASM Academy for Metals and Materials Committee, and
in 1976 was named a Fellow of the Society. In 1964, he co-edited the ASM seminar volume on Computers in Metallurgy. He has
served as Chairman of the Process Technology Division and as a Director of the ISS-AIME. In 1980, he was named a Distinguished
Life Member of the ISS. In 1976, he received the Science Award Gold Medal of the Extractive Metallurgy Division of TMS-AIME.
In 1983, he was named a Fellow of TMS. He was chairman of the former AIME-ISS Division Publications Committee. He served as
chairman of the Editorial Board for the AIME Monograph Series on Oxygen Steelmaking. In 1980, he presented the Howe Memorial
Lecture on “Steelmaking—The Jet Age.”
In 1991–92, he was the Krumb Lecturer of the Metallurgical Society. In 1980, he was named a Case Institute Centennial Scholar
and the Van Horn Distinguished Lecturer at Case Western Reserve University. He has lectured widely internationally, and at
technical conferences, universities, corporations, and technical society chapters, including presenting a number of keynote,
invited, and honorary lectures.
He was National President of Alpha Sigma Mu and a member of Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Xi, and the New York Academy of Sciences. He
is also a member of the American Society for Engineering Education and the American Foundry Society. He has held memberships
in the Iron and Steel Institute of London, the Iron and Steel Institute of Japan, and the Verein Deutscher Eisenhuttenleute.
He is a registered professional engineer in the State of Michigan. Dr. Pehlke has served as Foundry Educational Foundation
Professor at The University of Michigan for 17 years.
Professor Pehlke has authored or co-authored over 300 publications, including editing, authoring, or co-authoring 11 books.
His text Unit Processes of Extractive Metallurgy has been widely used throughout the world. He co-authored Continuous Casting—Design and Operations, which is Volume 4 of the ISS-AIME series. He has won seven American Foundry Society Best Paper awards.
In 1963, Dr. Pehlke published an ASM pioneering paper first describing computer modeling of continuous casting of steel. In
1964, he continued this work in conjunction with McLouth Steel Corporation, which had just installed the first slab casting
machine for steel in the United States. In 1968, he, with the support of the Heat Transfer Committee of the American Foundry
Society, initiated the first university research program in North America on computer modeling of the solidification of shaped
castings.
His early professional employment included three summers each with General Motors Research Laboratories and the Ford Scientific
Laboratory. He has consulted extensively on a wide range of metallurgical subjects, principally with ferrous and nonferrous
metal producers and their suppliers.
His research has covered a broad range of metallurgical topics with an emphasis on high-temperature physical chemistry of
metallurgical systems, modeling of solidification of metals, and computer applications in metallurgy. 相似文献
13.
George Krauss 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B》2001,32(2):205-221
This article reviews the strengthening and fracture mechanisms that operate in carbon and low-alloy carbon steels with martensitic
microstructures tempered at low temperatures, between 150 °C and 200 °C. The carbon-dependent strength of low-temperature-tempered
(LTT) martensite is shown to be a function of the dynamic strain hardening of the dislocation and transition carbide substructure
of martensite crystals. In steels containing up to 0.5 mass pct carbon, fracture occurs by ductile mechanisms of microvoid
formation at dispersions of second-phase particles in the matrix of the strain-hardened tempered martensite. Steels containing
more than 0.5 mass pct carbon with LTT martensitic microstructures are highly susceptible to brittle intergranular fracture
at prior austenite grain boundaries. The mechanisms of the intergranular fracture are discussed, and approaches that have
evolved to minimize such fracture and to utilize the high strength of high-carbon hardened steels are described.
The Edward DeMille Campbell Memorial Lecture was established in 1926 as an annual lecture in memory of and in recognition
of the outstanding scientific contributions to the metallurgical profession by a distinguished educator who was blind for
all but two years of his professional life. It recognizes demonstrated ability in metallurgical science and engineering.
Dr. George Krauss is currently University Emeritus Professor at the Colorado School of Mines. He received the B.S. in Metallurgical
Engineering from Lehigh University in 1955 and the M.S. and Sc.D. degrees in Metallurgy from the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology in 1958 and 1961, respectively, after working at the Superior Tube Company as a Development Engineer in 1956. In
1962–63, he was an NSF Postdoctoral Fellow at the Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforshung (Düsseldorf, Germany). He served at
Lehigh University as Assistant Professor, Associate Professor, and Professor of Metallurgy and Materials Science from 1963
to 1975 and, in 1975, joined the faculty of the Colorado School of Mines as the AMAX Professor of Physical Metallurgy. He
was the John Henry Moore Professor of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering at the time of his retirement from the Colorado
School of Mines in 1997.
In 1984, Dr. Krauss was a principal in the establishment of the Advanced Steel Processing and Products Research Center, an
NSF industry-university cooperative research center at the Colorado School of Mines, and served as its first director until
1993. He has authored the book Steels: Heat Treatment and Processing Principles, ASM International, 1990, coauthored the book Tool Steels, Fifth Edition, ASM International, 1998, and edited or coedited several conference volumes on topics including tempering of steel, carburizing,
zinc-based coatings on steel, and microalloyed forging steels. He has published over 280 papers and lectured widely at technical
conferences, universities, corporations, and ASM chapters, including a number of keynote, invited, and honorary lectures.
Dr. Krauss has served as the President of the International Federation of Heat Treatment and Surface Modification, 1989–91,
and as President of ASM International, 1996–97. He is a Fellow of ASM International and has received the Adolf Martens Medal
of the German Society for Heat Treatment and Materials Technology, the Charles S. Barrett Silver Medal of the Rocky Mountain
Chapter ASM, the George Brown Gold Medal of the Colorado School of Mines, and several other professional and teaching awards,
including the ASM Albert Easton White Distinguished Teacher Award in 1999. He is an Honorary Member of the Iron and Steel
Institute of Japan and a Distinguished Member of the Iron and Steel Society of AIME. 相似文献
14.
George Krauss 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A》2001,32(4):861-877
This article reviews the strengthening and fracture mechanisms that operate in carbon and low-alloy carbon steels with martensitic
microstructures tempered at low temperatures, between 150 °C and 200 °C. The carbon-dependent strength of low-temperature-tempered
(LTT) martensite is shown to be a function of the dynamic strain hardening of the dislocation and transition carbide substructure
of martensite crystals. In steels containing up to 0.5 mass pct carbon, fracture occurs by ductile mechanisms of microvoid
formation at dispersions of second-phase particles in the matrix of the strain-hardened tempered martensite. Steels containing
more than 0.5 mass pct carbon with LTT martensitic microstructures are highly susceptible to brittle intergranular fracture
at prior austenite grain boundaries. The mechanisms of the intergranular fracture are discussed, and approaches that have
evolved to minimize such fracture and to utilize the high strength of high-carbon hardened steels are described.
The Edward DeMille Campbell Memorial Lecture was established in 1926 as an annual lecture in memory of and in recognition
of the outstanding scientific contributions to the metallurgical profession by a distinguished educator who was blind for
all but two years of his professional life. It recognizes demonstrated ability in metallurgical science and engineering.
Dr. George Krauss is currently University Emeritus Professor at the Colorado School of Mines. He received the B.S. in Metallurgical
Engineering from Lehigh University in 1955 and the M.S. and Sc.D. degrees in Metallurgy from the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology in 1958 and 1961, respectively, after working at the Superior Tube Company as a Development Engineer in 1956. In
1962–63, he was an NSF Postdoctoral Fellow at the Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforshung (Düsseldorf, Germany). He served at
Lehigh University as Assistant Professor, Associate Professor, and Professor of Metallurgy and Materials Science from 1963
to 1975 and, in 1975, joined the faculty of the Colorado School of Mines as the AMAX Professor of Physical Metallurgy. He
was the John Henry Moore Professor of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering at the time of his retirement from the Colorado
School of Mines in 1997.
In 1984, Dr. Krauss was a principal in the establishment of the Advanced Steel Processing and Products Research Center, an
NSF industry-university cooperative research center at the Colorado School of Mines, and served as its first director until
1993. He has authored the book Steels: Heat Treatment and Processing Principles, ASM International, 1990, coauthored the book Tool Steels, Fifth Edition, ASM International, 1998, and edited or coedited several conference volumes on topics including tempering of steel, carburizing,
zinc-based coatings on steel, and microalloyed forging steels. He has published over 280 papers and lectured widely at technical
conferences, universities, corporations, and ASM chapters, including a number of keynote, invited, and honorary lectures.
Dr. Krauss has served as the President of the International Federation of Heat Treatment and Surface Modification, 1989–91,
and as President of ASM International, 1996–97. He is a Fellow of ASM International and has received the Adolf Martens Medal
of the German Society for Heat Treatment and Materials Technology, the Charles S. Barrett Silver Medal of the Rocky Mountain
Chapter ASM, the George Brown Gold Medal of the Colorado School of Mines, and several other professional and teaching awards,
including the ASM Albert Easton White Distinguished Teacher Award in 1999. He is an Honorary Member of the Iron and Steel
Institute of Japan and a Distinguished Member of the Iron and Steel Society of AIME. 相似文献
15.
Robert A. Rapp Robert F. Mehl Award Medalist 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A》2000,31(9):2105-2118
Despite great differences in the physical and chemical properties of various ionic media, common methods for analyzing internal
equilibrium provide useful and simple means for interpreting and predicting their behavior. The formalism of M. Pourbaix for
analyzing the activities and solubilities of solutes in aqueous solutions has provided a foundation for interpreting corrosion,
solubilities, and electrochemical phenomena for such solutions. Although perhaps not so obvious, the formalism of Kroger-Vink
(K-V) in plotting the point defect concentrations for ionic solids derives from the same mathematical method. Likewise, the
activities and solubilities for solutes in fused salts, e.g., fused sodium sulfate, can be treated by exactly the same sort of simultaneous resolution of equilibria for reactions in
an ionic medium. Suggestions for extension of this analysis to cryolite-base fused salt solutions important to aluminum extraction
are discussed.
The Institute of Metals Lecture and Robert Franklin Mehl Award is presented for leadership in the field of materials science
and applications. This honor recognizes an outstanding scientific leader by inviting him or her to present a lecture, at the
Society’s Annual Meeting, on a technical subject of particular interest to members in the materials science and application
of metals program areas.
Dr. Robert A. Rapp, Distinguished University Professor Emeritus at Ohio State University’s Department of Materials Science
and Engineering, is The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society’s (TMS) 2000 Institute of Metals Lecturer and will receive
the Robert Franklin Mehl Award at the 2000 TMS Annual Meeting.
Dr. Rapp earned his B.S. from Purdue University in 1956 and his M.S. and Ph.D. from the Carnegie Institute of Technology in
1958 and 1959, all in metallurgical engineering. Dr. Rapp was a research metallurgist at Wright Patterson Air Force Base before
joining the faculty at Ohio State.
He has published over 245 papers and holds 20 patients. Dr. Rapp was a Guggenheim Fellow from 1972 to 1973, has held two Fulbright
scholarships, and is a fellow of six US and foreign societies. He is a member of the National Academy of Engineering.
Presentation of this award took place at the 2000 TMS Annual Meeting and Exhibition in Nashville, TN March 12–16. 2000. 相似文献
16.
Derek J. Fray 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B》2000,31(6):1153-1162
Bibliometric studies have shown that the number of articles and citations of these articles in extractive metallurgy is relatively
small compared to most other scientific and engineering disciplines. However, many of these other disciplines can have a significant
influence on extractive metallurgy, and this article gives examples drawn from such diverse areas as solid-state chemistry,
materials for energy storage, solid-state physics, molten salt chemistry, and physical metallurgy. By use of this information,
it is demonstrated that significant improvements in the extraction of metals are possible.
The Extraction and Processing Lecturer Award honors an outstanding scientific leader in the field of nonferrous extractive
metallurgy with an invitation to present a comprehensive lecture at the TMS Annual Meeting.
Derek J. Fray is a Professor of Materials Chemistry in the Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy, University of Cambridge.
He earned his B.S. in metallurgy in 1961 and his Ph.D. in extractive metallurgy in 1965, both from Imperial College, London
University. Dr. Fray has held teaching positions at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Cambridge,
and the University of Leeds, where he served as department head.
Dr. Fray is the recipient of several honors and awards. He is a fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, as well as several
other universities and organizations. 相似文献
17.
Robert W. Bartlett 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B》1997,28(4):529-545
Heap leaching low-grade ores has become a major contributor to the extraction of economically important metals, notably copper
and gold. The state-of-the-art in heap leaching is reviewed with emphasis on process engineering. Rock leaching, including
rock pore diffusion and mineral kinetics, solution flow, and retention in ore heaps during percolation leaching, and bio-oxidation
of sulfidic ores are covered. Oxygen transport into heaps by gaseous diffusion, natural convection, and forced air ventilation
is discussed. Strategies for optimizing heap leaching include ore crushing, ore agglomeration, low-cost air ventilation of
sulfide ore heaps undergoing bio-oxidation using fans, and the use of aggregate metal extraction rate constants in making
metallurgical business decisions about heap leaching.
The Extraction and Processing Lecturer Award honors an outstanding scientific leader in the field of nonferrous extractive
metallurgy with an invitation to present a comprehensive lecture at the TMS Annual Meeting.
Robert W. Bartlett, presently dean of the College of Mines and Earth Resources and professor of metallurgical engineering
at the University of Idaho, has spent half of his career in industry, Anaconda, ARCO, and Kennecott, and half in academia,
Stanford and Idaho. He earned his degrees at the University of Utah. His lecture is based on research in industry and at the
University of Idaho.
Dr. Bartlett has been a member of TMS for over 40 years and was president in 1989. Earlier, he was a member of the TMS Board
of Directors representing, for 3 years, what is now the Extraction and Processing Division. Dr. Bartlett consults primarily
on processing in the mining and metals industries. He is a recipient of the TMS Extraction and Processing Technology Award,
the Turner Award of the Electrochemical Society, the Wadsworth Award of the Society of Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration,
and the McConnell Award of AIME. He is a member of the National Academy of Engineering. 相似文献
18.
Alexander McLean 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B》2006,37(3):319-332
In our efforts to characterize and improve the performance of an existing steelmaking process or in our quest to generate
useful knowledge as a basis for the development of new manufacturing routes, measurements and models should be considered
as two interdependent requirements. Without measurements, our models are incomplete and unsatisfactory. Without models, we
fail to realize, or perhaps even comprehend, the potential significance of our measurements. Sometimes in our enthusiasm,
we construct sophisticated elegant models and forget the reality of the actual manufacturing process. In this computer age,
we need to remember again the importance of observations and accurate measurements. In addition, as engineers and applied
scientists, we have an obligation and a responsibility to facilitate the transfer of new knowledge into the realm of operating
practice. During this process of generation, evaluation, and communication of new knowledge, the knowledge exchange step is
perhaps the most difficult. In this context, the preeminent aim of collaborative activities between our educational institutions,
industrial organizations, government funding agencies, and professional societies is to ensure the availability of high-quality
people who not only understand the fundamental aspects and practical implications of their discipline, but also are fully
equipped with the essential skills of communication that will enable them to participate throughout their career in this most
challenging and satisfying activity, the science and technology of steelmaking.
The Brimacombe Memorial Lectureship was established in 1999 by the Process Technology Division of the Iron & Steel Society
to honor Dr. J. Keith Brimacombe’s outstanding accomplishments in the area of process metallurgy, his dedication to the steel
industry, and his profound effect on people in the industry; and also to acquaint members, students, and engineers with the
many exciting opportunities that exist in the area of process metallurgy and to inspire them to pursue careers in this field.
Professor McLean obtained his degrees in Applied Chemistry and Metallurgy from the University of Glasgow and the Royal College
of Science and Technology, now the University of Strathcylde. After 5 years with the Metallurgy and Materials Science Department
at McMaster University in the mid-1960s, he moved to the Graham Research Laboratory of Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation
in Pittsburgh. He returned to Canada in 1970 and joined the Department of Metallurgy and Materials Science at the University
of Toronto where he served as the American Iron and Steel Institute Distinguished Professor from 1982 through 1986 and as
Department Chair from 1992 through 1997. He is an Adjunct Professor at Chiba Institute of Technology in Japan and holds the
position of Invited Professor at Kyoto University. In 1985, he served as President of the Iron and Steel Society of AIME and
in 1988 delivered the 65th Henry Marion Howe Memorial Lecture. He is an Honorary Member of AIME, the Iron & Steel Institute
of Japan, and the Hungarian Mining & Metallurgical Society. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and also several
professional associations. He has received Honorary Doctorates from the University of Miskolc in Hungary and the University
of Strathclyde in Scotland as well as awards from technical societies in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, and
Japan for contributions to the science and technology of steel processing and for activities pertaining to metallurgical education.
He has authored or co-authored about 300 publications and has served as a consultant to companies in North America and Europe
and as a board member of several industrial organizations. He was appointed Professor Emeritus at the University of Toronto
in 2002. 相似文献
19.
Hiroshi Majima 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B》1995,26(1):1109-1122
Recent developments in modeling and optimization studies using computer technology have had a remarkable effect on all areas
of extractive metallurgy. However, a lack of fundamental data regarding, for instance, activities, diffusion coefficients,
limiting current densities,etc. obstructs the reliable use of this method. In studying hydrometallurgy, I recognized the importance of fundamental analysis
and continued such works throughout my university life. For example, activities of water and solutes of the solution systems
H2SO4−Mx(SO4)y−H2O and HCl−MClx−H2O were determined, and the results were employed to analyze the dissolution mechanism of metal oxides as well as metal sulfides
in those solutions. In this article, fundamental studies mainly made in my laboratory to understand hydrometallurgical phenomena
will be discussed.
Dr. Majima received his Bachelor of Engineering and Doctor of Engineering degrees from Kyoto University. In the past 40 years,
he has served as an associate professor at the Research Institute of Mineral Dressing and Metallurgy of Tohoku University,
a professor at the Department of Mineral Engineering of the University of British Columbia, and a professor at the Department
of Metallurgy of Kyoto University. His research interest is directed toward thermodynamics related to hydrometallurgy. He
is the recipient of awards from the Mining and Metallurgical Institute of Japan and the surface Finishing Society of Japan.
The Extraction and Processing Lecturer Award honors an outstanding scientific leader in the Field of nonferrous extractive
metallurgy with an invitation to present a comprehensive lecture at the TMS Annual Meeting. 相似文献
20.
Hael Mughrabi 《Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B》2009,40(4):431-453
In this article, the physical origin of fatigue crack initiation in ductile metals is discussed from a historical perspective.
The main focus is to assess those cyclic slip irreversibilities in a microstructural sense that occur not only at the surface
but also in the bulk at the dislocation scale and to show how they contribute to surface fatigue damage. The evolution of
early fatigue damage, as evidenced experimentally in the last decades, is reviewed. The phenomenon of cyclic strain localization
in persistent slip bands (PSBs) and models of the formation of extrusions, intrusions, and microcracks are discussed in detail.
The predictions of these models are compared with experimental evidence obtained on mono- and polycrystalline face-centered-cubic
(fcc) metals. In addition, examples of the evolution of fatigue damage in selected fcc solid solution alloys and precipitation-hardened
alloys and in body-centered-cubic (bcc) metals are analyzed. Where possible, the cyclic slip irreversibilities p, defined as the fraction of plastic shear strain that is microstructurally irreversible, have been estimated quantitatively.
Broadly speaking, p has been found to vary over orders of magnitude (0 < p < 1), being almost negligible at low loading amplitudes (high fatigue lives) and substantial at larger loading amplitudes
(low fatigue lives).
Hael Mughrabi obtained his primary school education in Germany and subsequently attended different British schools in Jerusalem,
Palestine, and in Cairo, Egypt, where he graduated from secondary school at The English School in 1955. He is a German citizen.
After a three-year apprenticeship as a mechanic and toolmaker at Bosch GmbH Company in Stuttgart, he entered the Engineering
University of Stuttgart to study physics. During his studies, in his doctoral thesis work and in his subsequent occupation
as a senior researcher at the Max-Planck-Institute of Metal Research in Stuttgart (1966–1983), he specialized in metal physics
and performed mainly research in the fields of crystal defects, mechanical properties, and microstructural characterization.
He held a Visiting Professorship at Cornell University in 1978–1979. After receiving offers from three universities, he joined
the University of Erlangen–Nürnberg in 1984 as a Professor of Materials Science and Engineering and Head of an Institute of
General Materials Properties. In subsequent years, he held positions as Department Head and Dean of the School of Engineering.
Since 2002, Hael Mughrabi has been formally retired but is still active in various forms in research and in committee work.
Hael Mughrabi has published almost 300 papers and book chapters and has been editor or co-editor of several books and conference
proceedings, mainly in the fields of crystal plasticity, materials characterization, metal fatigue, high-temperature mechanical
properties of nickel-base superalloys, and modeling of mechanical behavior. He has been active in the organization and chairing
of many international conferences and has frequently been invited as a plenary or keynote speaker. Hael Mughrabi has been
a member of TMS for 25 years and of a number of other professional societies, including the German Materials Society (Deutsche
Gesellschaft für Materialkunde (DGM)). He has been a member of the Board of Directors of DGM and Chairman of the DGM Awards
Committee PKII and has been elected an Honorary Member of DGM. Hael Mughrabi is the holder of an Honorary Doctoral degree
from the Ruhr University Bochum and the recipient of several national and international awards, including the highest award
of DGM, the Heyn–Denkmünze. 相似文献