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The prime purpose of this book is to serve as a design is of
considerable value in helping the classroom text for the
engineering or architec student make the transition from the often
sim ture student. It will, however, also be useful to plistic
classroom exercises to problems of the designers who are already
familiar with design real world. Problems for solution by the
student in other materials (steel, concrete, masonry) but follow
the same idea. The first problems in each need to strengthen,
refresh, or update their capa subject are the usual textbook-type
problems, bility to do structural design in wood. Design but in
most chapters these are followed by prob principles for various
structural materials are lems requiring the student to make
structural similar, but there are significant differences. planning
decisions as well. The student may be This book shows what they
are. required, given a load source, to find the magni The book has
features that the authors believe tude of the applied loads and
decide upon a set it apart from other books on wood structural
grade of wood. Given a floor plan, the student design. One of these
is an abundance of solved may be required to determine a layout of
struc examples. Another is its treatment of loads. This tural
members. The authors have used most of book will show how actual
member loads are the problems in their classes, so the problems
computed. The authors have found that students, have been tested."
The prime purpose of this book is to serve as a design is of
considerable value in helping the classroom text for the
engineering or architec student make the transition from the often
sim ture student. It will, however, also be useful to plistic
classroom exercises to problems of the designers who are already
familiar with design real world. Problems for solution by the
student in other materials (steel, concrete, masonry) but follow
the same idea. The first problems in each need to strengthen,
refresh, or update their capa subject are the usual textbook-type
problems, bility to do structural design in wood. Design but in
most chapters these are followed by prob principles for various
structural materials are lems requiring the student to make
structural similar, but there are significant differences. planning
decisions as well. The student may be This book shows what they
are. required, given a load source, to find the magni The book has
features that the authors believe tude of the applied loads and
decide upon a set it apart from other books on wood structural
grade of wood. Given a floor plan, the student design. One of these
is an abundance of solved may be required to determine a layout of
struc examples. Another is its treatment of loads. This tural
members. The authors have used most of book will show how actual
member loads are the problems in their classes, so the problems
computed. The authors have found that students, have been tested."
Written by a university lecturer with more than forty years
experience in plasma technology, this book adopts a didactic
approach in its coverage of the theory, engineering and
applications of technological plasmas.
The theory is developed in a unified way to enable brevity and
clarity, providing readers with the necessary background to assess
the factors that affect the behavior of plasmas under different
operating conditions. The major part of the book is devoted to the
applications of plasma technology and their accompanying
engineering aspects, classified by the various pressure and density
regimes at which plasmas can be produced. Two chapters on plasma
power supplies round off the book.
With its broad range of topics, from low to high pressure plasmas,
from characterization to modeling, and from materials to
components, this is suitable for advanced undergraduates,
postgraduates and professionals in the field.
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