|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
Crack Control: Using Fracture Theory to Create Tough New Materials
goes beyond just trying to understand the origin of cracks and
fracture in materials by also providing readers with the knowledge
and techniques required to stop cracks at the nano- and
micro-levels, covering the fundamentals of crack propagation,
prevention, and healing. The book starts by providing a concise
foundational overview of cracks and fracture mechanics, then looks
at real-life ways that new tougher materials have been developed
via crack inhibition. Topics such as crack equilibrium, stress
criterion, and stress equations are then outlined, as are methods
for inventing new crack-resistant materials. The importance of
crack healing is emphasized and cracks that grow under tension,
bending, compression, crazing, and adhesion are discussed at length
as well
"Adhesion of Cells, Viruses and Nanoparticles" describes the
adhesion of cells, viruses and nanoparticles starting from the
basic principles of adhesion science, familiar to postgraduates,
and leading on to recent research results. The underlying theory is
that of van der Waals forces acting between cells and substrates,
embodied in the molecules lying at the surfaces, together with the
geometry and elasticity of the materials involved. The first part
describes the fundamental background to adhesion principles,
including the phenomenology, the important equations and the
modeling ideas. Then the mechanisms of adhesion are explored in the
second part, including the elastic deformations of spheres and the
importance of the energy of adhesion as measured in various tests.
It is demonstrated that adhesion of cells is statistical and
depends on Brownian movement and on the complex multiple contacts
that can form as cells move around. Then, detailed chapters on cell
adhesion, contact of viruses and aggregation of nanoparticles
follow in Part 3. Finally, the last chapter looks to the future
understanding of cell adhesion and points out some interesting
directions of research, development and treatment of diseases
related to these phenomena. This book is an ideal resource for
researchers on adhesion molecules, receptors, cell and tissue
culturing, virus infection, toxicity of nanoparticles and
bioreactor fouling. It can also be used to support undergraduate
and Masters level teaching courses. "This is a fascinating book and
it is an invaluable resource for understanding
particle-particle/surface adhesion at micro- and nano- scales. I
intend to keep one for my future reference and highly recommend it
to my students." (Prof. Zhibing Zhang, School of Chemical
Engineering, University of Birmingham, UK)
At the beginning of the twentieth century, engineers and
technologists would have recognized the importance of adhesion in
two main aspects: First, in the display of friction between
surfaces - at the time a topic of growing importance to engineers;
the second in crafts requiring the joining of materials -
principally wood-to form engineering structures. While physical
scientists would have admitted the adhesive properties of glues,
gels, and certain pastes, they regarded them as materials of
uncertain formulation, too impure to be amenable to precise
experiment. Biological scientists were aware also of adhesive
phenomena, but the science was supported by documentation rather
than understanding. By the end of the century, adhesion and
adhesives were playing a crucial and deliberate role in the
formulation of materials, in the design and manufacture of
engineering structures without weakening rivets or pins, and in the
use of thin sections and intricate shapes. Miniaturization down to
the micro- and now to the nano-level of mechanical, electrical,
electronic, and optical devices relied heavily on the understanding
and the technology of adhesion. For most of the century, physical
scientists were aware that the states of matter, whether gas,
liquid, or solid, were determined by the competition between
thermal energy and int- molecular binding forces. Then the solid
state had to be differentiated into crystals, amorphous glasses,
metals, etc. , so the importance of the molecular attractions in
determining stiffness and strength became clearer.
High-temperature Solid Oxide Fuel Cells, Second Edition, explores
the growing interest in fuel cells as a sustainable source of
energy. The text brings the topic of green energy front and center,
illustrating the need for new books that provide comprehensive and
practical information on specific types of fuel cells and their
applications. This landmark volume on solid oxide fuel cells
contains contributions from experts of international repute, and
provides a single source of the latest knowledge on this topic.
"Adhesion of Cells, Viruses and Nanoparticles" describes the
adhesion of cells, viruses and nanoparticles starting from the
basic principles of adhesion science, familiar to postgraduates,
and leading on to recent research results. The underlying theory is
that of van der Waals forces acting between cells and substrates,
embodied in the molecules lying at the surfaces, together with the
geometry and elasticity of the materials involved. The first part
describes the fundamental background to adhesion principles,
including the phenomenology, the important equations and the
modeling ideas. Then the mechanisms of adhesion are explored in the
second part, including the elastic deformations of spheres and the
importance of the energy of adhesion as measured in various tests.
It is demonstrated that adhesion of cells is statistical and
depends on Brownian movement and on the complex multiple contacts
that can form as cells move around. Then, detailed chapters on cell
adhesion, contact of viruses and aggregation of nanoparticles
follow in Part 3. Finally, the last chapter looks to the future
understanding of cell adhesion and points out some interesting
directions of research, development and treatment of diseases
related to these phenomena. This book is an ideal resource for
researchers on adhesion molecules, receptors, cell and tissue
culturing, virus infection, toxicity of nanoparticles and
bioreactor fouling. It can also be used to support undergraduate
and Masters level teaching courses. "This is a fascinating book and
it is an invaluable resource for understanding
particle-particle/surface adhesion at micro- and nano- scales. I
intend to keep one for my future reference and highly recommend it
to my students." (Prof. Zhibing Zhang, School of Chemical
Engineering, University of Birmingham, UK)
At the beginning of the twentieth century, engineers and
technologists would have recognized the importance of adhesion in
two main aspects: First, in the display of friction between
surfaces - at the time a topic of growing importance to engineers;
the second in crafts requiring the joining of materials -
principally wood-to form engineering structures. While physical
scientists would have admitted the adhesive properties of glues,
gels, and certain pastes, they regarded them as materials of
uncertain formulation, too impure to be amenable to precise
experiment. Biological scientists were aware also of adhesive
phenomena, but the science was supported by documentation rather
than understanding. By the end of the century, adhesion and
adhesives were playing a crucial and deliberate role in the
formulation of materials, in the design and manufacture of
engineering structures without weakening rivets or pins, and in the
use of thin sections and intricate shapes. Miniaturization down to
the micro- and now to the nano-level of mechanical, electrical,
electronic, and optical devices relied heavily on the understanding
and the technology of adhesion. For most of the century, physical
scientists were aware that the states of matter, whether gas,
liquid, or solid, were determined by the competition between
thermal energy and int- molecular binding forces. Then the solid
state had to be differentiated into crystals, amorphous glasses,
metals, etc. , so the importance of the molecular attractions in
determining stiffness and strength became clearer.
|
|