Research on the Basic Nature of Stress Corrosion for Various Structural Alloys at Room and Elevated Temperatures

This citation is provided as a resource for researchers, but Contrails cannot provide a full-text download

U.S. government employees, Military/Department of Defense employees, and U.S. government contractors and sub-contractors may be eligible to register with the Defense Technical Information Center (DTIC), where this report and others like it may be available
Report Number: ASD TR 61-713 Part 2
Author(s): Crossley, Frank A.
Corporate Author(s): Armour Research Foundation
Date of Publication: 1963-05-06
Pages: 49
Contract: AF33 616 7612
DoD Task:
Identifier: AD0405680
AD Number: AD-405 680

Abstract:
Program objectives were: 91) to study the effect of microstructure on susceptibility to stress-corrosion cracking in the short-transverse direction of 7075-T6 aluminum alloy: and (2) to study the kinetics of stress-corrosion cracking at elevated temperature of candidate materials for structural applications in the trisonic transport in the presence of sea salt. It was hypothesized that the poor resistance to stress corrosion of high-strength wrought aluminum alloys was due to the layered-type of grain structure characteristic of commercial material, and long life was associated with irregular or equiaxed grain structures. The experimental results gave good support to the hypothesis

Other options for obtaining this report:

Via the Defense Technical Information Center (DTIC):
This report may be available for download from DTIC
Use the Title from this record to locate the item in DTIC Online

Via National Technical Report Library:
The NTRL Order Number for this report is: AD405680
A record for this report, and possibly a pdf download of the report, exists at NTRL

Indications of Public Availability
There is evidence that this federally restricted report was once publicly available:

No digital image of an index entry indicating public availability is currently available
There has been no verification of an indication of public availability from an inside cover statement



Export