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The field of additive manufacturing is growing dynamically as the
interest is persisting from manufacturing sector, including other
sectors as well. Conceptually, additive manufacturing is a way to
build parts without using any part-specific tooling or dies from
the computer-aided design (CAD) file of the part. Second edition of
Additive Manufacturing highlights the latest advancements in the
field, taking an application oriented approach. It includes new
material on traditional polymer based rapid prototyping
technologies, additive manufacturing of metals and alloys including
related design issues. Each chapter comes with suggested reading,
questions for instructors and PowerPoint slides.
The field of additive manufacturing is growing dynamically as the
interest is persisting from manufacturing sector, including other
sectors as well. Conceptually, additive manufacturing is a way to
build parts without using any part-specific tooling or dies from
the computer-aided design (CAD) file of the part. Second edition of
Additive Manufacturing highlights the latest advancements in the
field, taking an application oriented approach. It includes new
material on traditional polymer based rapid prototyping
technologies, additive manufacturing of metals and alloys including
related design issues. Each chapter comes with suggested reading,
questions for instructors and PowerPoint slides.
Materials for Bone Disorders is written by a cross-disciplinary
team of research scientists, engineers, and clinicians and bridges
the gap between materials science and bone disorders, providing
integrated coverage of biomaterials and their applications. The
bioceramics, biopolymers, composites, and metallic materials used
in the treatment of bone disorders are introduced, as are their
interactions with cells, biomolecules, and body tissues. The main
types of bone disorder and disease are covered including
osteoporosis, spinal injury, load bearing joint diseases, bone
cancer, and forms of cranio-maxillofacial disorders. Bone disorders
are common across all ages. Various forms of bone disorders can
change the lifestyle of otherwise normal and healthy people. With
the development of novel materials, many forms of bone disorders
are becoming manageable, allowing people to lead a fairly normal
life. Specific consideration is given to areas where recent
advances are enabling new treatments, such as the use of resorbable
ceramics in bone tissue engineering and drug delivery, newer
polymer-based implants in load-bearing contexts, and engineering
biomaterials surfaces including modifying surface chemistry.
Ethical and regulatory issues are also explored.
One of the key challenges current biomaterials researchers face is
identifying which of the dizzying number of highly specialized
characterization tools can be gainfully applied to different
materials and biomedical devices. Since this diverse marketplace of
tools and techniques can be used for numerous applications,
choosing the proper characterization tool is highly important,
saving both time and resources. Characterization of Biomaterials is
a detailed and multidisciplinary discussion of the physical,
chemical, mechanical, surface, in vitro and in vivo
characterization tools and techniques of increasing importance to
fundamental biomaterials research. Characterization of Biomaterials
will serve as a comprehensive resource for biomaterials researchers
requiring detailed information on physical, chemical, mechanical,
surface, and in vitro or in vivo characterization. The book is
designed for materials scientists, bioengineers, biologists,
clinicians and biomedical device researchers seeking input on
planning on how to test their novel materials, structures or
biomedical devices to a specific application. Chapters are
developed considering the need for industrial researchers as well
as academics.
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