Introduction to Engineering Materials: The Bicycle and the Walkman

Front Cover
Merion Books, 1992 - Technology & Engineering - 386 pages
"The purpose of this book is to provide an introduction to materials science and engineering, the subject matter of which is taught not only in departments bearing that name, but also in departments of ceramics, polymer science, mechanical engineering, chemical engineering, civil engineering, physics, chemistry, and others. The field is so broad that it cannot possibly be represented fully in a one-semester introductory course, especially one which uses the kind of giant case-study method used here. The advantage of a case study is that it immediately immerses the student in a context which helps one to assimilate new information in an existing conceptual framework. Thus, the student can see the "big picture" from the outset and be able to understand how the subject fits together and is used. A disadvantage is that the various parts of the subject cannot all receive the amount of attention which practitioners of all those parts would feel they deserve. The student, therefore, should be aware that the fact that metallic materials have here recieved more space than polymeric, ceramic, or semiconducting materials, results, not from the relative importance of the latter three, but only from their present usage in the cases considered here."

From inside the book

Contents

57
5
WHEELS AND SPOKES CORROSION RESISTANCE
10
MECHANICAL BEHAVIOR OF SPOKES
22
Copyright

13 other sections not shown

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