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Fundamentals of Tribology and Bridging the Gap Between the Macro- and Micro/Nanoscales (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2001)
Loot Price: R8,707
Discovery Miles 87 070
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Fundamentals of Tribology and Bridging the Gap Between the Macro- and Micro/Nanoscales (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2001)
Series: NATO Science Series II: Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry, 10
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The word tribology was fIrst reported in a landmark report by P.
Jost in 1966 (Lubrication (Tribology)--A Report on the Present
Position and Industry's Needs, Department of Education and Science,
HMSO, London). Tribology is the science and technology of two
interacting surfaces in relative motion and of related subjects and
practices. The popular equivalent is friction, wear and
lubrication. The economic impact of the better understanding of
tribology of two interacting surfaces in relative motion is known
to be immense. Losses resulting from ignorance of tribology amount
in the United States alone to about 6 percent of its GNP or about
$200 billion dollars per year (1966), and approximately one-third
of the world's energy resources in present' use, appear as friction
in one form or another. A fundamental understanding of the
tribology of the head-medium interface in magnetic recording is
crucial to the future growth of the $100 billion per year
information storage industry. In the emerging
microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) industry, tribology is also
recognized as a limiting technology. The advent of new scanning
probe microscopy (SPM) techniques (starting with the invention of
the scanning tunneling microscope in 1981) to measure surface
topography, adhesion, friction, wear, lubricant-fIlm thickness,
mechanical properties all on a micro to nanometer scale, and to
image lubricant molecules and the availability of supercomputers to
conduct atomic-scale simulations has led to the development of a
new fIeld referred to as Microtribology, Nanotribology, or
Molecular Tribology (see B. Bhushan, J. N. Israelachvili and U.
General
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