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EMA
4121: Nonferrous Metals
Credits: 3; Prereq: EMA-3010, EMA-3123
or permission of instructor.
Physical metallurgy of ferrous
and non-ferrous metals and their alloys. A correlation of properties, structural
and mechanical history, thermal history, and service behavior of the various
metals and their alloys.
Text: Heat Treatment, Structure
and Properties of Nonferrous Alloys, Charlie R. Brooks (American Society for
Metals, Metals Park, Ohio 44073, 1982).
Supplemental Source Books:
(All on reserve shelf at Marston Science Library).
1. Materials Science and
Engineering: An Introduction, W.D. Callister, Jr., (Wiley & Sons, NY, 4th
Ed., 1996).
2. Metals Handbook (10th
Edition), Vol. 2--Properties and Selection: Non-Ferrous Alloys and Pure Elements
(American Society for Metals, Metals Park, OH, 1979).
Homework: Non-regular; each
question worth 10 points.
Tests: Two tests plus a
final.
Project: A project will
be assigned which will require selecting a variety of alloys with specified
microstructures to use in an engineered structure.
Grade:
Homework = 10%
Each of 2 tests = 20%
Project = 20%
Final = 30%
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EMA
5108:Vacuum Science and Technology
Credits: 3; Prereq: CHM-2045,
PHY-3101, MAP-2302 or equivalents, or consent of instructor.
Introduction to the generation
and use of vacuum for scientific research and industrial production. Kinetic
theory of gases discussed as necessary to understand vacuum phenomena. Description
of components and materials, vacuum systems design and uses in metallurgy,
electronics, physics, and chemistry.
Text: Marsbed Hablanian,
High Vacuum Technology: A Practical Guide, 2nd Edition, - Marcel Dekker, Inc.,
NY, 1997.
References:
- A User's Guide to Vacuum Technology,
Second Edition, J.F. O'Hanlon (Wiley-Interscience, NY, 1989).
- Vacuum Technology, A. Roth (North-Holland,
NY, 1976).
- Foundations of Vacuum Science
and Technology, J.M. Lafferty, Editor, (John Wiley and Sons, NY, 1998).
- Handbook of Vacuum Science and
Technology, D.M. Hoffman, B. Singh and J.H. Thomas, III, (Academic Press,
NY, 1998).
- Vacuum Technology - Its Foundations,
Formulae, and Tables, Leybold - Hereaus (see instructor for request Info.).
- Basic Vacuum Technology, A Chambers,
R.K. Fitch and B.S. Halliday (Adam Hilger, NY, 1989).
- Ultrahigh Vacuum Practice, G.F.
Weston (Butterworths, NY, 1985).
- Process Vacuum System Design
and Operation, J.L. Ryans and Daniel L. Roper (McGraw-Hill, Inc., NY, 1986).
Grade:
2 exams - 22% each
Final - 30%
Design Problems - 20%
Homework - 6%
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EMA-6105:
Fundamentals
and Applications of Surface
Science
Credits 3; Prereq: CHM-2045,
PHY 3101, MAP-2302, or equivalent, or consent of instructor.
Fundamental and experimental description
of phenomena occurring at the surface of solids, including structure, composition,
atomic and molecular processes, and electronic properties. Experimental approaches
and data used to support theoretical models.
Topics: Structure of Surfaces,
Electronic Structure, Electron-Surface Interactions, Ion-Surface Interactions,
Thermodynamics of Surfaces, Surface Mobility, Adsorption - The Kinetic View,
Surface Chemical Reactions
Text: "Surface Science:
An Introduction," John B. Hudson, Butterworth-Heinemann, NY, 1992.
Grade:
Two one hour exams - 20% each
Term paper plus class presentation - 20%
Homework - 10%
Comprehensive final exam - 30%.
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Short
Course at AVS
Operation and Maintenance of
Vacuum Pumping Systems
This course is designed for those
who want to learn how to properly operate vacuum systems themselves or are
responsible for people who operate them. Knowledge of operating limits and
general characteristics of pumps, gauges, and other auxiliary equipment used
in vacuum systems is needed.
Goals:
- Learn to operate vacuum pumping
systems efficiently with minimum downtime.
- Learn about preventive maintenance
on pumps and pumping systems.
- Understand leak detection in
operating vacuum systems.
- Learn to troubleshoot and test
the performance of vacuum pumping systems.
Course Description:The
idea behind this course is to show how vacuum pumping systems can be operated
most effectively, to achieve maximum performance while holding downtime
for maintenance to a minimum. Typical procedures used for systems that
employ oil-sealed rotary or dry mechanical diffusion, turbomolecular,
sputter-ion, and cryogenic pumps are described. There are also discussions
of possible variations in typical procedures that may be used in special
cases. Troubleshooting and performance-testing techniques are presented
as well as methods of leak detection that are most effective for operating
vacuum systems.
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