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Thermodynamics of Materials (Mit Series in Materials Science and Engineering)

by David V. Ragone

ISBN-10: 9780471308850
ISBN-10: 0-471-30885-4
ISBN-13: 9780471308850
ISBN-13: 978-0-471-30885-0
Paperback
1994-10
Wiley


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Editorials


Product Description
Volume 1 in the MIT Series in Materials Science & Engineering. Based on classical thermodynamics. DLC: Materials - Thermal properties.

Reviews


not that great
I used this book in a graduate thermodynamics course and found it to be considerably lacking in explanations and in depth review of the subject. I do not recommend this book for using thermodynamics, instead there are others, such as one by Gaskell and another concerning solids (phase transformations in metals and alloys), that are much more useful.

Good Intermediate Materials Science Teat
This review refers to Volume I which was I used in a recent graduate materials thermodynamics course. Completing two prior courses in classical thermodynamics oriented towards mechanical engineering and a survey course in Materials Science proved helpful in providing a background for a better understanding the material in this text. However, the basics are developed but in less detail. The text is definitely oriented towards understanding the basics in the application of thermodynamics to materials science and provides reasonable coverage of chemical equilibrium and binary solutions.

The material is developed sequentially so it is best to start at the beginning and work through each section. Fortunately I had access to most of the typographical errors but they do not represent a major hurdle to the basic quality of the theory presented and its understanding. It would have proved useful to the student had the author included answers to selected problems. Overall, I found this to be a good intermediate text.


A good text for graduate courses.
This is a well written book covering topics of relevance to materials. Explanations are concise and so are more digestible for graduate students. The author has taken special care to use clear and definitive notation. There are a few errors - in particular the Ellingham diagram is wrong - the temperature scale should be oC, not K. However, there are fewer errors than many texts I have seen. Each chapter has a good number of nice problems.

Inadequate textbook of an already difficult subject matter
As an undergraduate taking a course in thermodynamics of materials, I found the book to be exceedingly brief and, at times, incomprehensible. To those new to thermodynamics, the book is nearly useless. To make it even worse, the book doesn't have answers to the practice questions to allow students to check their work, and it is inadequate as a reference for simple things such as unit conversions.


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