RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MECHANISMS OF ENVIRONMENTAL CRACKING AND DESIGN CRITERIA
- 1 January 1980
- book chapter
- Published by Elsevier
Abstract
No abstract availableThis publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Effect of Oxygen Temperature Combinations on the Stress Corrosion Susceptibility of Sensitized Type 304 Stainless Steel in High Purity WaterCorrosion, 1979
- Corrosion Fatigue Crack Propagation in Aluminum-7% Magnesium AlloyCorrosion, 1979
- Quantitative examination of slip-dissolution and hydrogen-embrittlement theories of cracking in aluminium alloysMetal Science, 1978
- The function of strain-rate in stress corrosion crack propagation in an α-titanium alloyCorrosion Science, 1975
- A pictorial review of failures in conventional boiler plantInternational Journal of Pressure Vessels and Piping, 1975
- Corrosion fatigue crack growth of titanium alloys in aqueous environmentsMetallurgical Transactions, 1974
- Electrode Reaction Rates on Straining Aluminum-Magnesium Wires in Chloride and Sulfate SolutionsJournal of the Electrochemical Society, 1973
- Steam Turbine Failure at Hinkley Point ‘A’Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, 1972
- Post yield fracture mechanicsMaterials Science and Engineering, 1972
- Stress-corrosion cracking of mild steels in sodium hydroxide solutions containing various additional substancesCorrosion Science, 1967