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23 of 23 found the following review helpful:
AN EXCELLENT BOOK!!! Aug 24, 1999 This is one of the best text books I have ever read. Prof. Dieter has the exceptional ability to cover a wide range of topics in a clearly understandible, easy to read and perfectly comprehensible manner. Although the book is on mechanical behavior of metals, it can easily be used to learn the fundamental concepts of elasticity, plasticity, fracture mechanics and dislocation theory. These topics constitute the background to study the mechanical behavior of any material and Dieter's book teaches them in an elegant manner. Especially if you are a practicing metallurgist, this book will stay on your desk throughout your carreer and you'd refer to quite often. Although the price of the book is high, it is definitely worth spending your money on. It is a invaluable classic in the field of mechanical behavior of metals. I highly recommend it.
14 of 16 found the following review helpful:
The Bible of material science Oct 12, 2000
By cmpst52
"cmpst52"
This book covers the entire scope of mechanical behavior in a single volume! How Dieter accomplished his, I can't imagine. But he did.He covers everything, from the fundamentals of strees and strain, through dislocation theory, basic deformation and fracture, and the whole scope of metal-forming operations. If you need it, it's in this book. Two complaints: 1) There is relatively little coverage of computer modeling, FEM, etc. These are the future of engineering, and Dieter needs to get on the boat when (if) he writes a fourth edition. 2) The index is USELESS. These two faults don't change the fact that this is one of he most important single books ever written in the field of material science.
7 of 8 found the following review helpful:
Thorough and comprehensive Jan 01, 2006
By Newton Ooi Metallurgy is one of the oldest established branches of materials science, and science in general. Yet many of the underlying principles, such as dislocation theory and plasticity, have only been explored within the last 100 years or so. As such, there is a wealth of information in metallurgy that one could learn. This book by G. Dieter is one of the better books to use to learn about metallurgy. Coming in at 800 pages even, this book is a thorough study of the principles behind mechanical metallurgy and is appropriate for both students in the field and practicing engineers. The book provides complete mathematical treatments of numerous subjects within mechanical metallurgy, including crystallography of defects, thermodynamics of plastic flow, kinetics, etc... The book is somewhat old-fashioned in that it leaves out more modern topics such as the use of computer simulations in metallurgy. Because of this, the book does not deserve 5 stars. But due to its breadth and coverage of other topics, it deserves 4 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
An Essential Feb 17, 2006
By Adam McCormick
"Adam McCormick"
Good Undergraduate metallurgy books are hard to find, this one's an essential for any forging class and any metallurgist's bookshelf.
Mechanical Metallurgy Jul 21, 2011
By Ravi N. Shenoy
"monanikhil"
An excellent primer on all aspects of mechanical metallurgy, covering the basics of dislocation theory for an understanding of mechanical properties of materials; fracture mechanics; and metal forming processes.
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