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Tuesday, 20 September 2022
Difference between Engineering and Technology
Wednesday, 24 June 2020
What is the "Casting" Process !!! and how these are performed ???
INVESTMENT CASTING
For investment (sometimes called lost-wax) casting, the pattern is made from a wax or plastic that has a low melting temperature. Around the pattern is poured a fluid slurry, which sets up to form a solid mold or investment; plaster of paris is usually used. The mold is then heated, such that the pattern melts and is burned out, leaving behind a mold cavity having the desired shape. This technique is employed when high dimensional accuracy, reproduction of fine detail, and an excellent finish are required—for example, in jewelry and dental crowns and inlays. Also, blades for gas turbines and jet engine impellers are investment cast.
CONTINUOUS CASTING
At the conclusion of extraction processes, many molten metals are solidified by casting into large ingot molds. The ingots are normally subjected to a primary hot rolling operation, the product of which is a flat sheet or slab; these are more convenient shapes as starting points for subsequent secondary metal-forming operations (i.e., forging, extrusion, drawing). These casting and rolling steps may be combined by a continuous casting (sometimes also termed ‘‘strand casting’’) process. Using this technique, the refined and molten metal is cast directly into a continuous strand which may have either a rectangular or circular cross section; solidification occurs in a water-cooled die having the desired cross-sectional geometry. The chemical composition and mechanical properties are more uniform throughout the cross sections for continuous castings than for ingot-cast products. Furthermore, continuous casting is highly automated and more efficient.
https://academyofengineers.blogspot.com/2020/06/what-is-casting-process-and-how-these.html
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Monday, 1 June 2020
Let’s talk about MEMORY !!!!
Let’s
talk about MEMORY !!!!
Memory
Hierarchy
A memory unit is the collection
of storage units or devices together. The memory unit stores the binary
information in the form of bits. Generally, memory/storage is classified into 2
categories:
●
Volatile
Memory: This loses its data, when power is switched off.
●
Non-Volatile
Memory: This is a permanent storage and does not lose any data
when power is switched off.
The total memory capacity of a computer can be visualized by hierarchy of components. The memory hierarchy system consists of all storage devices contained in a computer system from the slow Auxiliary Memory to fast Main Memory and to smaller Cache memory.
Auxillary
memory access time is generally 1000 times that of the main memory, hence it is at the bottom of
the hierarchy.
The main memory occupies the central position because it is equipped to communicate directly with the CPU and with auxiliary memory devices through Input/output processor (I/O).
When the program not residing in main memory is needed by the CPU, they are brought in from auxiliary memory.
Programs not currently needed in main memory are transferred into auxiliary memory to provide space in main memory for other programs that are currently in use.
The cache memory is used to store program data which is currently being executed in the CPU. Approximate access time ratio between cache memory and main memory is about 1 to 7~10
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Thursday, 28 May 2020
Let's discuss today about the “DEVELOPMENT OF MICROSTRUCTURES IN IRON–CARBON ALLOYS”
Today we talk about the “DEVELOPMENT
OF MICROSTRUCTURES IN IRON–CARBON ALLOYS”.
Phase changes that occur upon passing from the ϒ region into the ∝ + Fe3C phase field are relatively complex.
Consider,
for example, an alloy of eutectoid composition (0.76 wt% C) as it is cooled
from a temperature within the ϒ phase region, say, 800˚C, that is, beginning at point a and moving down the
vertical line xx’. Initially, the alloy is composed entirely of the
austenite phase having a composition of 0.76 wt% C and corresponding
microstructure. As the alloy is cooled, there will occur no changes until the eutectoid
temperature (727˚C) is
reached.
The
microstructure for this eutectoid steel that is slowly cooled through the eutectoid
temperature consists of alternating layers or lamellae of the two phases (∝ and Fe3C) that form
simultaneously during the transformation. In this case, the relative layer
thickness is approximately 8 to 1. This microstructure point b, is
called pearlite because it has the appearance of mother of pearl when
viewed under the microscope at low magnifications.
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