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In 1992 Congress passed the Defense Manufacturing Engineering
Education Act with the intent of encouraging academic institutions
to increase their emphasis on manufacturing curricula. The need for
this incentive to integrate the academic and industrial communities
was clear: gaps in manufacturing science were inhibiting the
evolution of new manufacturing technologies that are required for
the U.S. to maintain a competitive posture in the world
marketplace. The Army Research Laboratory and Sandia National
Laboratories sought to contribute to the congressional intent by
initiating a new series of graduate level college textbooks. The
goal was to focus next-generation scientists onto issues that were
common to the needs of the commercial market, the affordability of
DoD weapons systems, and the mobilization readiness of the U.S.
Armed Forces. The textbook The Mechanics of Solder Wetting and
Spreading was written in this spirit by nationally renowned
scientists for academe and industry. Research ers using the book
are encouraged to formulate programs that will establish scien
tific correlations between manufacturing process controls and
product reliability. Such correlations are essential to the
building of a new electronics industry which is based upon the
futuristic concepts of Virtual Factories, Prototyping, and
Testing."
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