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HOT EXTRUSION OF ALUMINIUM POWDER

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dc.contributor.author Kumar, Ashok
dc.date.accessioned 2014-10-09T10:26:00Z
dc.date.available 2014-10-09T10:26:00Z
dc.date.issued 1981
dc.identifier Ph.D en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/5457
dc.guide Jain, P. C.
dc.guide Mehta, M. L.
dc.description.abstract Extrusion of metal powders is a well established forming process and its potential especially for shaping brittle powders into useful products was realised in the very early stages when filaments of electric bulbs were successfully manufactured. The application of this technique to softer metal powders like iron, copper and aluminium is a recent innovation. Although the experimental technique for producing extruded products from powder is well develop-ed, theoretical analysis of the process involved received little attention. The earliest attempt in this direction was initiated as late as 1970 when some well established theories of metal forming were applied to the extrusion of aluminium powder and its alloys. Application of the slip line field theory and upper bound analysis could predict the load required for extrusion which was lower than that required for the extrusion of cast billet into final product of the same geometry. It was emphasised that unlike the extrusion of a cast billet, powder billet during extrusion must necessarily be subjected to massive shear zones along slip lines in order that a strong and coherent product was obtained. Based on this reasoning the use of square edge dies Uiith relatively higher reduction ratios ( B.> 10 0l ) was favoured. Experimentation was confined mainly to a temperature of 300°C and the theoretical analysis employed had its own limitations because of simplified assumptions.................... en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject METALLURGICAL MATERIAL ENGINEERING en_US
dc.subject ALUMINIUM POWDER en_US
dc.subject METAL POWDER EXTRUSION en_US
dc.subject ALUMINIUM ALLOYS en_US
dc.title HOT EXTRUSION OF ALUMINIUM POWDER en_US
dc.type Doctoral Thesis en_US
dc.accession.number 177175 en_US


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