Science and Technology of Fibers and Related Materials: Proceedings of the Fiber Society 50th Anniversary Technical Conference Held in Princeton, New Jersey, August 19-23, 1990Ludwig Rebenfeld |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 88
Page 102
... material , we see that the only phase present up to 1900 ° C is the beta phase , while at temperatures exceeding this the alpha phase has begun to appear ( Fig . 2 ) . As before , this pattern of phase development is expected in this ...
... material , we see that the only phase present up to 1900 ° C is the beta phase , while at temperatures exceeding this the alpha phase has begun to appear ( Fig . 2 ) . As before , this pattern of phase development is expected in this ...
Page 104
... material . The spec- trum of the unheated material is clearly the superposition of the as - received polycarbosilane and alpha silicon carbide spectra ( Fig . 5 ) . Upon heating to 800 ° C , the polycarbosilane peak near 0 ppm has ...
... material . The spec- trum of the unheated material is clearly the superposition of the as - received polycarbosilane and alpha silicon carbide spectra ( Fig . 5 ) . Upon heating to 800 ° C , the polycarbosilane peak near 0 ppm has ...
Page 313
... material C. The background bending recovery of experimental material C is generally uniform , with in- termittent spikes representing rapidly increasing bending recovery over fila- ment lengths up to 0.5 m ; the spikes have an apparent ...
... material C. The background bending recovery of experimental material C is generally uniform , with in- termittent spikes representing rapidly increasing bending recovery over fila- ment lengths up to 0.5 m ; the spikes have an apparent ...
Contents
Technological Developments in ManMade Fibers and Related | 33 |
Morphology and Near Tm Behavior of High Performance Ultrahigh | 67 |
Properties Structures and Temperature Limitations | 87 |
Copyright | |
22 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
amorphous analysis angle appear Applied assumed behavior bending birefringence blend braided break calculated carpet compared composite compression constant cotton crystalline crystallization curve decrease deformation density dependence described determined developed diameter diffusion direction discussed distance distribution draw effect energy experimental extension fabric factor failure fiber filament finish force fraction function geometry given heat higher impact improved increase indicated initial length liquid load lower m/min material measured mechanical method modulus nylon observed obtained occur orientation parameters phase polyester polymer possible present pressure produced properties range ratio recovery relative sample Scanning shape shear shown in Figure shows solution specimen Spectra speed spinning spun strain strength stress structure surface Table temperature tenacity tensile Text treated treatment twist unit values variability yarn