Strengthening mechanisms in metals
Anything that makes it harder or slower for dislocations to move will strengthen a metal. Therefore, we can employ grain size reduction, alloying, and cold working to make metals stronger. This gives rise to Hall-Petch relation and other important tools for customizing mechanical properties of alloys.

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Recovery, Recyrstallization, and Grain Growth

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Understanding Steels and Heat Treatment

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Grain Boundaries in Materials (Low Angle Boundaries, Coincidence Site Lattices)

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Grain size hardening

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Solid solution hardening

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MSE 201 S21 Lecture 23 - Module 4 - Strengthening Metals: Part 1

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Techniques for Strengthening Metals

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Using TTT diagrams to predict the microstructures of steel

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The Strangest Things that Correlate with IQ

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Dry Column Vacuum Chromatography (DCVC) Tutorial

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The Most Misunderstood Concept in Physics

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Understanding Metals

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Age hardening II: Microstructure and mechanisms

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Muddiest Points: Dislocations and Plastic Deformation of Metals

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ch 7 Materials Engineering

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Heat Treatment - Types (Including Annealing), Process and Structures (Principles of Metallurgy)

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How to use phase diagrams and the lever rule to understand metal alloys

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