01634nam 2200481Ka 450 991069770980332120081120131854.0(CKB)5470000002391879(OCoLC)275170756(EXLCZ)99547000000239187920081120d1985 ua 0engtxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierMonodisperse latex reactor (MLR)[electronic resource] a materials processing space shuttle mid-deck payload /by Dale M. Kornfeld[Marshall Space Flight Center, Ala.] :National Aeronautics and Space Administration, George C. Marshall Space Flight Center,[1985]14 pages digital, PDF fileNASA TM ;86487Title from title screen (viewed Nov. 20, 2008)Monodisperse latex reactor Chemical reactorsnasatLatexnasatMicrogravity applicationsnasatMicroparticlesnasatPolystyrenenasatSpace processingnasatSpace Shuttle payloadsnasatChemical reactors.Latex.Microgravity applications.Microparticles.Polystyrene.Space processing.Space Shuttle payloads.Kornfeld Dale M1412931George C. Marshall Space Flight Center.GPOGPOBOOK9910697709803321Monodisperse latex reactor (MLR)3508092UNINA01455nam0 22003131i 450 UON0003756120231205102131.21520020107d1948 |0itac50 baengIT|||| 1||||Aram naharaimA contribution to the history of upper Mesopotamia in the second millennium B.C. / by Roger T. O'Callaghan with an appendix on indo-aryan names by P.-E. DumontRomaPontificium Institutum Biblicum1948XV, 164 p., 38 p. di tav.ill.30 cm3 carte rip.001UON000139412001 Analecta OrientaliaCommentationes Scientificae de Rebus Orientis Antiqui26MESOPOTAMIASTORIAMITANNIUONC007006FIMESOPOTAMIASTORIAHAMMURABIUONC011508FIMESOPOTAMIASTORIAIII MILLENNIOUONC012573FIITRomaUONL000004VOA SERIEVICINO ORIENTE ANTICO - COLLANEAO'CALLAGHANRoger T.UONV024017647101DUMONTP.-E.UONV024018Pontificio Istituto BiblicoUONV245930650ITSOL20240220RICASIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOUONSIUON00037561SIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI VOA SERIE 004 026 SI SA 47464 5 026 Aram naharaim1193563UNIOR04139nam 2200961z- 450 991055774870332120220111(CKB)5400000000045855(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/76656(oapen)doab76656(EXLCZ)99540000000004585520202201d2021 |y 0engurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierBiocomposite Inks for 3D PrintingBasel, SwitzerlandMDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute20211 online resource (213 p.)3-0365-1738-3 3-0365-1737-5 Three-dimensional (3D) printing has evolved massively during the last years. The 3D printing technologies offer various advantages, including: i) tailor-made design, ii) rapid prototyping, and iii) manufacturing of complex structures. Importantly, 3D printing is currently finding its potential in tissue engineering, wound dressings, tissue models for drug testing, prosthesis, and biosensors, to name a few. One important factor is the optimized composition of inks that can facilitate the deposition of cells, fabrication of vascularized tissue and the structuring of complex constructs that are similar to functional organs. Biocomposite inks can include synthetic and natural polymers, such as poly (ε-caprolactone), polylactic acid, collagen, hyaluronic acid, alginate, nanocellulose, and may be complemented with cross-linkers to stabilize the constructs and with bioactive molecules to add functionality. Inks that contain living cells are referred to as bioinks and the process as 3D bioprinting. Some of the key aspects of the formulation of bioinks are, e.g., the tailoring of mechanical properties, biocompatibility and the rheological behavior of the ink which may affect the cell viability, proliferation, and cell differentiation.The current Special Issue emphasizes the bio-technological engineering of novel biocomposite inks for various 3D printing technologies, also considering important aspects in the production and use of bioinks.Information technology industriesbicssc3D bioprinting3D cell culture3D printingabsorptionadditive manufacturingartificial limbbacteria biofabricationbacterial nanocellulosebioactive scaffoldbiocompositebiocomposite inkbiofabricationbioinkbioinksbiomanufacturingbiomedicinebioprintingcancercancer stemnesscarboxylated agarosecellulosecellulose nanocrystalscellulose nanofibrilsclinical translationalCNFcollagencytotoxicitydrug deliveryECMextracellular matrixfibrilsforest-based MFCfree-standingfused deposition modeling (FDM)growth factor cocktailhuman nasal chondrocyteshydrogelhydrogelsn/ananocellulosephysical cross-linkingpine sawdustpolyhydroxyalkanoatesprintabilityprobiotic foodscaffoldssoda ethanol pulpingtissue engineeringtubular organtubular tissuevessel stentingwound dressingsInformation technology industriesCarrasco Garyedt1278408Carrasco GaryothBOOK9910557748703321Biocomposite Inks for 3D Printing3013232UNINA