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Hot Isostatic Pressing

Materials at High Temperatures, 1991
Publisher Summary This chapter explores about hot isostatic pressing (HIP). It is a materials fabrication process in which a starting powder or a premolded shape is simultaneously subjected to both high temperatures and high isostatic pressures, using a gas transfer medium.
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Transparent hot-pressed alumina I: Hot pressing of alumina

Ceramics International, 1985
Abstract The densification of alumina to nearly full density continuous hot pressing is described. The influence of the atmosphere on hot pressing is discussed as well as the influence of the process parameters temperature, pressure and transit rate.
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Hot Isostatic Pressing

1979
In this discussion of hot isostatic pressing (HIP) consideration will be limited to systems and processes which operate above 1000 °C and 1000 kg/cm2. The HIP process came into use in 1957 when Sailer, Hodge, Paprocki, and Dayton, all of the Battelle Memorial Institute, filed a U.S.
A. G. Bowles, D. E. Witkin
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Hot-Press Hand Burn Treatment

Journal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation, 1998
Hand injuries are common in the workplace. Modern industrial machines cause complex occupational hand injuries. Hot-press contact hand burns generally are encountered by workers in the dry-cleaning industry. Seventeen patients with hot-press hand burns were treated at the University of California-Irvine Medical Center Burn Center.
B, Celikoz, B M, Achauer, V M, VanderKam
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Hot off the Press

Natural Product Reports, 2019
A personal selection of 32 recent papers is presented covering various aspects of current developments in bioorganic chemistry and novel natural products such as preuisolactone A from Preussia isomera.
Robert A. Hill, Andrew Sutherland
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Hot Pressing and Hot Isostatic Pressing

2021
Mathias Herrmann, Jan Räthel
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Hot‐Pressing Magnesium Fluoride

Journal of the American Ceramic Society, 1962
Hot‐pressing powdered magnesium fluoride resulted in a polycrystalline compact with essentially the density and transmittance of a single crystal. Compacted powdered MgF 2 was heated to 650°C and held under a pressure of 30,000 psi for 15 minutes.
DEAN A. BUCKNER   +2 more
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