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The book presents recent advances in the use of hot isostatic pressing (HIP) techniques in the manufacture and processing of materials. Keywords: Turbomachinery, Heat Exchangers, Hydrogen Electrolyzers, Duplex Stainless Steels, Naval Nuclear Applications, Rapid L-PBF Printing, Combined Manufacturing and Heat Treatment, Nickel-Based Alloy, Magnetically Soft FeSi6.5 Powder, GH4169 Superalloy, Additive Manufacturing, Tungsten Alloy, Three-Dimensional Flow Path Structure, Accident Tolerant Fuel Cladding, Simulation-Based Manufacturing, Modelling of Powder Filling, Capsule Filling, Porous Materials, Large Complex Shape Parts, Shear Stress Coefficient, Capsule Material Strain Hardening.
Hot Isostatic Pressing (HIP) has important applications in advanced materials manufacturing, automotive, aerospace, oil and gas industries, power generation, and medical and nuclear fields. The symposium focused on HIP applications in such areas as material optimization, radioactive nuclear waste, cast aluminum alloys, ceramic materials, superalloys, manufacturing of turbine blisks, densification of additive manufactured parts, diffusion welding of dissimilar metals and alloys, heat treatment inside the HIP unit, turbopump components, improved tooling materials, valve spindles for engines, Ni-base superalloys, titanium aluminide, stainless steels, metal matrix composites, phase transformations, uniform load cooling equipment, duplex steel, diamond/SiC composites, large hot zone units, additive manufacturing, efficient modeling, reactor vessel fabrication, electron beam welding, superconducting magnet structures.
Safe and effective management of nuclear waste provides a broad range of challenges for materials science. Waste processing, waste form and engineered barrier properties, interactions between engineered and geological systems, radiation effects, chemistry and transport of waste species, and long-term predictions of repository performance are just some of the scientific problems facing modern society. This book, the nineteenth in a very successful series from MRS, offers an international and interdisciplinary perspective on the issues, and features developments in both fundamental and applied areas. Topics include: excess plutonium dispositioning; spent nuclear fuel; glass waste forms; ceramic and crystalline waste forms; cement waste forms; waste processing; waste container materials; speciation and sorption; bentonite barriers; flow and transport; repository site characterization; natural analogs and performance assessment.
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