Chapter 17: Problem 13
Explain why it might be difficult to weld aluminum to steel or to weld any two unlike metals together.
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Chapter 17: Problem 13
Explain why it might be difficult to weld aluminum to steel or to weld any two unlike metals together.
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A 25.01 -mm-diameter brass ball sits at room temperature on a 25.00 - mm- diameter hole made in an aluminum plate. The ball and plate are heated uniformly in a furnace, so both are at the same temperature at all times. At what temperature will the ball fall through the plate?
The background temperature of the universe is a) \(6000 \mathrm{~K}\). b) \(288 \mathrm{~K}\). c) \(3 \mathrm{~K}\). d) \(2.73 \mathrm{~K}\). e) \(0 \mathrm{~K}\).
On a cool morning, with the temperature at \(15.0^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\), a painter fills a 5.00 -gal aluminum container to the brim with turpentine. When the temperature reaches \(27.0^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\), how much fluid spills out of the container? The volume expansion coefficient for this brand of turpentine is \(9.00 \cdot 10^{-4}{ }^{\circ} \mathrm{C}^{-1}\).
Thermal expansion seems like a small effect, but it can engender tremendous, often damaging, forces. For example, steel has a linear expansion coefficient of \(\alpha=1.2 \cdot 10^{-5}{ }^{\circ} \mathrm{C}^{-1}\) and a bulk modulus of \(B=160\) GPa. Calculate the pressure engendered in steel by a \(1.0^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\) temperature increase.
For food storage, what is the advantage of placing a metal lid on a glass jar? (Hint: Why does running the metal lid under hot water for a minute help you open such a jar?)
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