The Leading eBooks Store Online
for your Apple or Android device, Nook, Kobo, PC, Mac, Sony Reader...
- 1
- Page
Most popular at the top
Bubbles, Drops, and Particles In Non-Newtonian Fluidsby Chhabra Raj P
Taylor & Francis 2006; US$ 249.95Provide an coverage of the scientific foundations and the advances in particle motion in non-Newtonian media. This book demonstrates how dynamic behavior of single particles can yield useful information for modeling transport processes in complex multiphase flows. more...
Electrorheological Fluidsby Tian Hao
Elsevier 2005; US$ 270.00An electrorheological (ER) suspension is made from an insulating liquid medium embodying either a semi-conductive particulate material or a semi-conductive liquid material (usually a liquid crystal material). Since its mechanical properties can be easily controlled over a wide range (almost from a pure liquid to a solid), the ER fluid can be used as an electric and mechanical interface in various industrial areas, for example, in the automotive industrial for clutch, brake and damping systems and in robotic arm joints and hands. In addition, the ER technique can be used to fabricate advanced functional materials such as photonic crystals, smart inks, and heterogeneous polymer composites. The major objective of Electrorheological Fluids ... more...
Rheologyby R.I. Tanner; K. Walters
Elsevier 1998; US$ 228.00The science of rheology remains a mystery to most people, even to some scientists. Some respectable dictionaries have been quite cavalier in their attitude to the science, the small Collins Gem dictionary, for example, being quite happy to inform us that a Rhea is an three-toed South American ostrich, whilst at the same time offering no definition of rheology. This maybe due to the fact that the science is interdisciplinary and does not fit well into any one of the historical disciplines. This book contains an in-depth study of the history of rheology, beginning with the statements of Heraclitus, Confucius and the prophetess Deborah. It also emphasises the distinctive contributions of Newton, Hooke, Boltzmann, Maxwell, Kelvin and others, and... more...
Rheology and Processing of Polymeric Materials, 1by Chang Dae Han
Oxford University Press, USA 2007; US$ 174.501. Introduction. Part I Fundamental Principles of Rheology. 2. Kinematics and Stresses of a Deformable Body. 3. Continuum Theory for the Viscoelasticity of Flexible Homogeneous Polymeric Fluids. 4. Molecular Theory for the Viscoelasticity of Flexible Homogeneous Polymeric Fluids. 5. Experimental Methods for Measurement of the Rheological Properties of. Part II Rheological Behavior of Polymeric Materials. 6. Rheology of Homopolymers and Random Copolymers. 7. Rheology of Miscible Polymer Blends. 8. Rheology of Block Copolymers. 9. Rheology of Liquid-Crystalline Polymers. 10. Rheology of Thermoplastic Polyurethanes. 11. Rheology of Immiscible Polymer Blends. 12. Rheology of Particulate-Filled Polymers, Nanocomposites, and Fiber Reinforced Thermoplastic... more...
Rheology and Processing of Polymeric Materials, 2by Chang Dae Han
Oxford University Press, USA 2007; US$ 174.50Part III: Processing of Thermoplastic Polymers. 15. Flow of Polymeric Liquids in Complex Geometry. 16. Plasticating Single-Screw Extrusion. 17. Morphology Evolution of Immiscible Polymer Blends During Compounding. 18. Compatibilization of Two Immiscible Homopolymers. 19. Wire Coating Extrusion. 20. Fiber Spinning. 21. Tubular Film Blowing. 22. Injection Molding. 23. Coextrusion. 24. Thermoplastic Foam Processing. Part IV: Processing of Thermosets. 25. Reaction Injection Molding. 26. Pultrusion of Thermoset/Fiber Composites. 27. Compression Molding of Thermoset/Fiber Composites more...
Cavitation in Non-Newtonian Fluidsby Emil-Alexandru Brujan
Springer 2011; US$ 179.00Non-Newtonian properties on bubble dynamics and cavitation are fundamentally different from those of Newtonian fluids. The most significant effect arises from the dramatic increase in viscosity of polymer solutions in an extensional flow, such as that generated about a spherical bubble during its growth or collapse phase. In addition, many biological fluids, such as blood, synovial fluid, and saliva, have non-Newtonian properties and can display significant viscoelastic behaviour. This monograph elucidates general aspects of bubble dynamics and cavitation in non-Newtonian fluids and applies them to the fields of biomedicine and bioengineering. In addition it presents many examples from the process industries. The field is strongly interdisciplinary... more...
- 1
- Page





