What's the difference between metallurgical and metallurgy?

Metallurgical


Definition:

  • (a.) Of or pertaining to metallurgy.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The method was employed in 601 workers of hot shops of the metallurgical enterprises including 18 professional groups.
  • (2) It’s time to take a careful look to see if it best serves the needs and priorities of today.” Jewell said that the ban would not apply to metallurgical coal, small-scale prospecting or resources on tribal lands.
  • (3) These surface treatments allowed testing of the same basic material which was mill-finished, metallurgically polished, electrochemically oxidized, sintered with a porous surface, and glow-discharged.
  • (4) The metallurgical properties of 61 retrieved 316L stainless steel (ASTM F138-76) hip plate devices used for the treatment of intertrochanteric fractures were examined.
  • (5) No statistically significant metallurgical or corrosion differences were discerned between the two types of devices studied.
  • (6) The prevalence of adiposity and nutritional status among the working population of seven regions in the Ukrainian SSR (teachers, workers engaged in the chemical, metallurgical, textile, wood-working industries and in agriculture) were studied.
  • (7) To investigate the relationship between occupation and lung cancer, a case-control study was performed in the province of Trieste, Italy, where metallurgical and mechanical industries, dock activities and shipbuilding and ship repairing are predominant.
  • (8) In total 1,149 pupils of the III class of the mechanical, metallurgical, building, power engineering and chemical vocational schools were examined.
  • (9) 258 units of fixed crowns and inlays, produced with the powder metallurgic Degusint-System (Degussa), were clinically evaluated 6 and 12 months after insertion.
  • (10) Samples of alloy were cut from each group, and together with a piece from an original ingot, were mounted, polished, etched, and examined under a metallurgical microscope.
  • (11) This has ranged widely through the metallurgical world and across the periodic table of the elements.
  • (12) The metallurgical industry synonymous with Wales has slowly been choked to death.
  • (13) New optical zone markers, diamond knives, and gauge blocks were ordered from a random selection of manufacturers and inspected by an independent metallurgical engineer.
  • (14) The metallurgical parameters of thin inclusion content and heavy inclusion content also were significantly correlated for all removals, as well as for symptomatic removals.
  • (15) The study embraces the shops: metallurgic, electrolysis, production of sulfuric acid and shop 100.
  • (16) Metallurgical examination failed to reveal any metallic debris in the cyst material.
  • (17) Metallurgical investigation identified the foreign body as a fragment of a metal hammer.
  • (18) Correlation between some factors connected with work performance in a big metallurgical plant, employing approximately 16000 persons, and the occurrence of nervous system diseases was analysed.
  • (19) A new application has been found for an adhesive-backed, nylon polishing cloth previously used chiefly in the metallurgic field.
  • (20) The present study was designed to evaluate the metallurgical properties of an experimental, low-cost copper-zinc-aluminum-nickel alloy for dental castings.

Metallurgy


Definition:

  • (n.) The art of working metals, comprehending the whole process of separating them from other matters in the ore, smelting, refining, and parting them; sometimes, in a narrower sense, only the process of extracting metals from their ores.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In 1984 the press-fit condylar knee was first introduced and was intended to provide a condylar knee system primarily for posterior cruciate retention that addressed refinements in metallurgy, prosthetic geometry and sizing, cementless fixation, inventory management, and instrumentation.
  • (2) Thirteen of the 25 revisions required in the early series were due to stem fracture, a complication rarely seen now with improved stem design and superalloy metallurgy.
  • (3) The authors examined a group of pregnant women employed in metallurgy and in a control group.
  • (4) The physical and mechanical properties of samples of a nickel-base alloy fabricated by powder metallurgy were determined.
  • (5) It can also be used for many other applications, for example, in metallurgy, petrography and geostrategy.
  • (6) in length), having either conventional smooth surfaces (control) or porous surfaces (20 to 50 micron particle size) produced by powder metallurgy techniques, were positioned in the right atrial a-pendage.
  • (7) An economic evaluation is made on temporary disability because of disease of trauma, for a three-year period in one shop of technological plant for nonferrous metallurgy.
  • (8) Archaeological and anthropological studies of early developments in writing, music and metallurgy by ancient Peruvians and Persian peoples should be combined with PET-scan studies of their descendants to discover if, as preliminary archaeological data suggest, the two ancient populations differed on a genetic basis in higher brain functions, yet are indistinguishable as metallurgical engineers.
  • (9) Subjects ranged from maths to metallurgy and modern languages.
  • (10) Metallurgical occupational hazards harm the health status in workers engaged into heat-treating metallurgy, induce the gastrointestinal disorders, which are demonstrated by the elevated transitory disablement.
  • (11) Basing on complex physiological and hygienic studies, the contributors propose an assessment of the work load of those engaged in the major professions in copper and nickel metallurgy.
  • (12) She grew up in Norilsk, a Siberian mining and metallurgy city that was once the centre of the Norillag gulag and one of the 10 most polluted places on earth.
  • (13) Transitory disablement in 5886 workers engaged for the whole year into heat treating metallurgy was compared during 5 years (1981-1985) with that in 291 workers engaged into repairing mechanical occupations so as to reveal metallurgical occupational factors influencing on gastrointestinal morbidity.
  • (14) Aluminium metal high-disperse dust presents a major health-affecting factor in aluminium powder metallurgy.
  • (15) In order to accurately evaluate copper exposure at working places where copper fume may arise (Metallurgy Department) it is necessary to determine Cu concentrations in respirable dust.
  • (16) These are as follows: ferrous metallurgy (5.21), metals producing industry (4.88), textile industry (4.83), chemical industry (4.63) and rubber processing industry (4.73).
  • (17) The origins of metallurgy stretch back nearly 4,000 years in South America.
  • (18) Working environment has been evaluated in two copper metallurgy plants by analysis of Cu and other metals (Pb, Cd, Zn) concentrations.
  • (19) Incidence of multiple myeloma was significantly increased for a number of occupational groups such as farmers, smelter and metallurgy workers, and miners-quarrymen-rock blasters.
  • (20) The attention is directed to regions with national industrial branches, most intensively polluting the atmospheric air (metallurgy, chemistry, petroleum-chemistry, cellulose-paper industry) and such, where the air pollution is related first of all to transport across the border-line.

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