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  • 1.  World Art Day

    Posted 13 days ago

    In celebration of World Art Day today, the IMS Membership Sub-Committee and the IMS Micrograph Database Committee teamed up together to showcase how art and metallography are intertwined. All four of these images appear in the IMS Micrograph Database. Read the captions below corresponding to each picture, and also feel free to share your own artistic micrographs by replying to this post!

    A big thank-you goes to Dana Drake for putting these images together and creating their captions!

    1st Image - (sp0104) This image reminds me of the importance of perspective, as a 2D picture it looks like a mountain valley, or an optical illusion. It's actual purpose, however, is to show the flow of grains (and implying the developed compressive stress) in the rolled thread of a fastener.

    2nd Image - (rf0042) Notice the difference in the colors, shapes, and sizes of features in the center of the image? Does it look like a blue headed bird sitting in front of the sun, or like a human heart, or perhaps even something else? While the striking colors and contrasting geometries stir the imagination, we are, in reality, informed of a metallic inclusion in the zirconium matrix.

    3rd Image - (picturehs0018) This image of a high strength, low alloy steel weld reminds me of the impressionist and abstract works of many artists; Monet, Kandinsky, Klimt, to name a few. The color palette, brought about by Beraha's sulfamic reagent and polarized light, speaks of vibrant flowers, nebulae, and joy.

    4th Image - (Cu0350) Wow. This is metal? This wonderful tint-etched image of wrought brass shows us important information about this material's structure and thermal history.





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    Johnathon Brehm
    R&D Laboratory Support Technologist
    Sandia National Laboratories
    Albuquerque NM
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  • 2.  RE: World Art Day

    Posted 13 days ago

    Thanks for sharing these Johnathon! Take a look at these artsy images team! @Akanksha Parmar, @Roxana Ruxanda, @Eric Cole, @James Edghill, @Mike Wattenbach!



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    Dana Drake
    Lab Engineer-Metals
    EOS of North America
    Hutto TX
    (720) 560-3832
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  • 3.  RE: World Art Day

    Posted 11 days ago
    Edited by David Lammers 11 days ago
    metallographic image from a piece of Smelted Iron from Ninnesota Iron Sand (black and white image of gray metal under a microsocpe, showing voids, islands of pearlite and cementite with untampered martensite and some possible bainite.
    Photo from the National Conference on Contemporary Cast Iron Art and Practice (NCCCIAP) held in 2023 at the National Historic Monument at the SLOSS Furnaces.  This was part of the Wayne Potratz professor emeritus from the University of Minnesota.  It was interesting to see the vast variety of structures in the small sample.  Additional photos included, showing charging the furnace, the instructor removing slag/checking on progression of the smelt, the data from the smelt(rate of adding material), Breaking down the bloom pulling the furnace apart, separated pieces of the bloom, The group picture with people holding the smelted iron bloom pieces.
    Participant in leather safety equipment, pouring the material approximately 10lbs at a time into the top of the furnace with flames coming out the top.Charging the furnace with (iron sand and wood charcoal)
    Instructor on his knees using a metal rod to remove nonmetallic slag glass from the top of the melt and checking the progression of the smelt.
    Instructor checking on smelt and removing slagimage of a chalk board containing written data of when the material was added and rate of smelt.
    Data from smeltremoved the furnace and showing removing the hot mass of smelted ironremoving the bloom and tearing down the furnace
    black metalic smelt pieces of the bloom on a white background thirteen larger portions with some smaller bits above)bloom portions divided and handed out (a number was selected for choice, I received the last choice but all lots were good).
    workshop participants with instructor in the center many holding their piece of the smelted bloom


    Group photo before leaving many showing their bloom pieces.  The instructor is in the center with his hands on his knees. 
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    David Lammers
    Engineer
    Total Component Solutions
    Sioux Center IA
    (712) 451-6646
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