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Word(s) in meaning: chat  "global warming"
Postal codes: USA: 81657, Canada: T5A 0A7

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What does COTE stand for?

Coefficient of Thermal Expansion


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This definition appears very rarely and is found in the following Acronym Finder categories:

  • Science, medicine, engineering, etc.

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Cross of the Dutchman (gaming)
Cult of the Dolphin
Customer of the Day
Case of the Dumb Asses
Company of the Drunken Wyvern (computer game)
Canadian Office of Technology Exchange in Environment
Center of the Earth
Children on the Edge
Choirs of the Eye (Kayo Dot music album)
Circle of the Earth (web comic)
Committee on the Environment (American Institute of Architect)
Council on Teacher Education
Council on the Environment (various organizations)
Creature of the Ether
Council of Occupational Therapists for the European Countries (est. 1986)
Council for Trade and Economic Development (CARICOM)
Committee for Teacher Education Through Distance Education (RSA)
Comision de Trabajo Ecumenico Dominicano, Inc. (Dominican Republic)
Church of the Enlightened Pistolero
Committee on Teacher Education Policy (South Africa)



Samples in periodicals archive:
Dielectric material with a higher coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) invokes a greater pad rotation.
They also feature a relatively low coefficient of thermal expansion, which contributes to their overall performance, especially with regard to form/fit, in encapsulated parts such as sensors.
It has the lowest coefficient of thermal expansion of all metals in the 273 to 177oC range.
Introduction The glass fiber reinforced polymer (GFRP) bars used in concrete structures present a transverse coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) 3 to 5 times greater than that of hardened concrete (Masmoudi et al.
Precise knowledge of the coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) can be utilized to estimate the thermal stresses.
When exposed to thermal cycling, a BGA or flip chip will expand or contract differently than the substrate on which it is mounted because of each material's coefficient of thermal expansion.
com; Bergen op Zoom, The Netherlands), new materials developments are showing solutions vis-a-vis one of the key problems that plastics seem to present, which is the coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE).
Polycarbonate has a high coefficient of thermal expansion which, with traditional 'single-skin' rooflights can lead to problems of deflection.

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