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Please guide me to some scientific sites which deal with the thermal processing in the jet turbine and the material of the blades

2006-11-29 19:18:36 · 2 answers · asked by icwf_79 1 in Science & Mathematics Engineering

2 answers

Turbine blades are nickel-based alloy and are mono-crystalline in structure (I know how this is done, but not sure about divulging it in such a public forum).

Do a Yahoo search on "turbine", "nickel", and "mono-crystalline" to see some links.

2006-12-03 08:13:01 · answer #1 · answered by www.HaysEngineering.com 4 · 0 0

hi ! when you heat something up it expands. if you could measure a pot of water as you heat it ,it would get a little fuller another example. some engines have cylinder sleeves. you cant put them in the engine because the size is to close. so you put the sleeves a freezer to shrink them. you cant see that they shrunk but with a micrometer you can measure it .after you put them in the engine they warm up and expand so they fit tight. a simple test to show you. fill a glass jar with water and put the lid on tight. now put the jar in a plastic bag. place the bag in the freezer after the water freezes ith jar should break. that's from the water expanding. water is the only thing that expands when it gets colder. everything else shrinks

2016-05-23 04:22:50 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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