May_June_AMP_Digital
4 Editorial 5 Feedback 5 Research Track s 6 OMG! 7 Surface Engineering 8 Metals/Polymers/Cera mics 10 Testing/Characterizati on 12 Emerging Technology 13 Process Technology 55 Advertisers Index 55 Classifieds 55 Editorial Preview 55 Special Advertising Se ction 56 3D PrintShop TRENDS INDUSTRY NEWS DEPARTMENTS Check out the Digital Edition online at asminternational.org/news/magazines/am-p ASM International serves materials professionals, nontechnical personnel, and managers wordwide by providing high-quality materials information, education and training, networking opportunities, and professional development resources in cost-effective and user-friendly formats. ASM is where materials users, producers, and manufacturers converge to do business. AdvancedMaterials & Processes (ISSN 0882-7958, USPS 762080) publishes eight issues per year: January, February/ March, April, May/June, July/August, September, October, andNovember/December, by ASM International, 9639 Kinsman Road, Materials Park, OH 44073-0002; tel: 440.338.5151; fax: 440.338.4634. Periodicals postage paidat Novelty, Ohio, and additional mailing offices. Vol. 177, No. 4, MAY/JUNE 2019. Copyright © 2019 by ASM International ® . All rights reserved. Distributed at no charge to ASMmembers in the United States, Canada, andMexico. International members can pay a $30 per year surcharge to receive printed issues. Subscriptions: $475. Single copies: $51. POSTMASTER: Send3579 forms to ASM International, Materials Park, OH 44073-0002. Change of address: Request for change should include old address of the subscriber. Missing numbers due to “change of address” cannot be replaced. Claims for nondelivery must be made within 60 days of issue. Canada Post Publications Mail Agreement No. 40732105. Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to: 700 Dowd Ave., Elizabeth, NJ 07201. Printedby Publishers Press Inc., Shepherdsville, Ky. 20 AUTOMOTIVE ALUMINUM—PART VII Laurent Chappuis and Robert Sanders Launching an aluminum vehicle into production is a far greater challenge than building a fleet of prototypes. There was no shortage of technical challenges for the engineers at Honda, Audi, and Ford. 26 NEW NICKEL-BASE SUPERALLOYS WIT HSTAND EXTREME TEMPERATURES Subhashish Meher Hot section components of next-generation energy systems call for superalloys that can handle the heat. 31 HTPro The official newsletter of the ASM Heat Treating S ociety. This quarterly supplement focuses on heat treati ng technology, processes, materials, and equipment, along with Heat Treating Society news and initiatives. FEATURES MAY/JUNE 2019 | VOL 177 | NO 4 A D V A N C E D M A T E R I A L S & P R O C E S S E S | M A Y / J U N E 2 0 1 9 3 20 26 31
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