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Materials Enabled Designs

E-BookEPUBDRM AdobeE-Book
320 Seiten
Englisch
Elsevier Science & Techn.erschienen am02.06.2009
There are books aplenty on materials selection criteria for engineering design. Most cover the physical and mechanical properties of specific materials, but few offer much in the way of total product design criteria. This innovative new text/reference will give the 'Big picture view of how materials should be selected-not only for a desired function but also for their ultimate performance, durability, maintenance, replacement costs, and so on. Even such factors as how a material behaves when packaged, shipped, and stored will be taken into consideration. For without that knowledge, a design engineer is often in the dark as to how a particular material used in particular product or process is going to behave over time, how costly it will be, and, ultimately, how successful it will be at doing what is supposed to do. This book delivers that knowledge.
* Brief but comprehensive review of major materials functional groups (mechanical, electrical, thermal, chemical) by major material categories (metals, polymers, ceramics, composites)
* Invaluable guidance on selection criteria at early design stage, including such factors as functionality, durability, and availability
* Insight into lifecycle factors that affect choice of materials beyond simple performance specs, including manufacturability, machinability, shelf life, packaging, and even shipping characteristics
* Unique help on writing materials selection specifications
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Verfügbare Formate
BuchGebunden
EUR80,00
E-BookEPUBDRM AdobeE-Book
EUR58,95

Produkt

KlappentextThere are books aplenty on materials selection criteria for engineering design. Most cover the physical and mechanical properties of specific materials, but few offer much in the way of total product design criteria. This innovative new text/reference will give the 'Big picture view of how materials should be selected-not only for a desired function but also for their ultimate performance, durability, maintenance, replacement costs, and so on. Even such factors as how a material behaves when packaged, shipped, and stored will be taken into consideration. For without that knowledge, a design engineer is often in the dark as to how a particular material used in particular product or process is going to behave over time, how costly it will be, and, ultimately, how successful it will be at doing what is supposed to do. This book delivers that knowledge.
* Brief but comprehensive review of major materials functional groups (mechanical, electrical, thermal, chemical) by major material categories (metals, polymers, ceramics, composites)
* Invaluable guidance on selection criteria at early design stage, including such factors as functionality, durability, and availability
* Insight into lifecycle factors that affect choice of materials beyond simple performance specs, including manufacturability, machinability, shelf life, packaging, and even shipping characteristics
* Unique help on writing materials selection specifications
Details
Weitere ISBN/GTIN9780080941837
ProduktartE-Book
EinbandartE-Book
FormatEPUB
Format HinweisDRM Adobe
Erscheinungsjahr2009
Erscheinungsdatum02.06.2009
Seiten320 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
Dateigrösse4701 Kbytes
Artikel-Nr.2745599
Rubriken
Genre9200

Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
1;Front cover;1
2;Half title page;2
3;Title page;4
4;Copyright page;5
5;Dedication;6
6;Table of contents;8
7;Preface;12
8;Acknowledgments;14
9;Chapter 1: The Materials Engineering Perspective;16
9.1;Introduction;16
9.2;The Materials Engineering Perspective;17
9.3;What Is Materials Engineering?;20
9.4;Products and Their Materials;22
9.5;Product Success and the Materials Engineering Perspective;27
9.6;Types of Product Development Projects;32
9.7;Companies Applying the Materials Engineering Perspective;33
9.8;Costs to Gain Materials Engineering Knowledge;34
9.9;Costs of Bad Materials Engineering Decisions;35
9.10;The Remainder of the Book;35
9.11;References;37
10;Chapter 2: Design Requirements;38
10.1;Introduction;38
10.2;Developing Design Requirements;39
10.3;Product Design Requirements;44
10.4;Subassembly Design Requirements;56
10.5;Product Element Design Requirements;58
10.6;References;64
11;Chapter 3: Selecting Materials;66
11.1;Introduction;66
11.2;Materials Selection Process;66
11.3;Identifying Potential Materials;68
11.4;Evaluating the Materials;70
11.5;Selecting the Materials;73
12;Chapter 4: Material Properties and Materials Science;74
12.1;Introduction;74
12.2;Material Properties and Material Features;74
12.3;Categories of Materials;76
12.4;Metals;77
12.5;Ceramics;95
12.6;Polymers;106
12.7;Composites;116
12.8;Surfaces;121
12.9;Interfaces;122
12.10;Defects;124
12.11;Materials Information Resources;124
12.12;References;128
13;Chapter 5: Manufacturing Process Considerations;130
13.1;Introduction;130
13.2;Component Fabrication Processes;130
13.3;Overview of Joining Processes;146
13.4;Overview of In-Process Structures;154
13.5;Process Inputs and Outputs;155
13.6;Process Variation and Capability;169
13.7;References;174
14;Chapter 6: Degradation and Reliability of Materials;176
14.1;Introduction;176
14.2;Modes of Material Degradation and Failure;178
14.3;Characterizing the Degradation and Reliability of Materials;188
14.4;Accelerated Stress Testing;192
14.5;Advantages and Disadvantages of Product Verification and Materials Reliability Testing;194
14.6;Testing Protocols;196
14.7;Testing Problems;200
14.8;References;202
15;Chapter 7: Product Planning and Control Documents;204
15.1;Introduction;204
15.2;Product Planning;205
15.3;Control Documents;210
15.4;CONTROL DOCUMENT INFORMATION;215
15.5;References;223
16;Chapter 8: Product Concept Development;224
16.1;Introduction;224
16.2;Perform Detailed Market Analysis;226
16.3;Write Detailed Product Specification;232
16.4;Product Concept Generation, Evaluation, and Selection;233
16.5;References;236
17;Chapter 9: Materials Engineering Considerations for System-Level Design;238
17.1;introduction;238
17.2;Design Subassemblies and Product Elements;240
17.3;Design Product Elements;243
17.4;Develop Sourcing Strategy;249
17.5;Select Type II And Type III Suppliers;256
17.6;Supplier Proposal Process;258
17.7;References;264
18;Chapter 10: Detail Design and Testing;266
18.1;Introduction;266
18.2;Select Custom Subassemblies and Components Suppliers;267
18.3;Select Off-the-Shelf Subassemblies and Components;274
18.4;Select Materials;277
18.5;Manufacturing Process Development;282
18.6;Complete SubAssembly and Component Specifications;287
18.7;Product Verification Testing;288
18.8;Root Cause Analysis;290
18.9;References;292
19;Chapter 11: Production;294
19.1;Introduction;294
19.2;Improve Manufacturing Yield;294
19.3;Cost Reduction;300
20;Chapter 12: Materials Engineering Strategies for the Product Realization Process;304
20.1;Introduction;304
20.2;Start with Materials That Offer a High Probability of Success;304
20.3;Do not Consider Every Material, Component, and Subassembly in the World as Options for a Product;305
20.4;Work Out All Custom Component or Subassembly Details before Using a Low-Cost Supplier;306
20.5;Develop Design Guidelines;306
20.6;Budget for Materials Engineering Support;309
20.7;Consolidate Materials within and Across Platforms;310
21;Index;312
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