00928nam0 22002651i 450 UON0033587420231205104238.99320091006d1948 |0itac50 baitaIT|||| 1||||Del poetaRainer Maria Rilkea cura di Nello SaitoTorinoEinaudi1948XVIII, 101 p.18 cm.ITTorinoUONL000014830Letteratura tedesca21RILKERainer MariaUONV116078164099SAITONelloUONV166440EinaudiUONV246211650ITSOL20241122RICASIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOUONSIUON00335874SIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI TED 24 I RIL 36 SI ST 5627 5 36 Del poeta956627UNIOR05152nam 22005894a 450 991100669370332120200520144314.01-280-62864-297866106286430-08-045601-4(CKB)1000000000363845(EBL)269578(OCoLC)475998013(SSID)ssj0000242089(PQKBManifestationID)12059530(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000242089(PQKBWorkID)10318998(PQKB)10929283(MiAaPQ)EBC269578(EXLCZ)99100000000036384520050126d2005 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrScience and technology of rubber /edited by James E. Mark, Burak Erman, Frederick R. Eirich3rd ed.Amsterdam ;Boston Elsevier Academic Press20051 online resource (762 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-12-464786-3 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Frontmatter; Half Title Page; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Contributors; Preface to the Third Edition; Preface to the Second Edition; Preface to the First Edition; 1. Rubber Elasticity: Basic Concepts and Behavior; I. INTRODUCTION; II. ELASTICITY OF A SINGLE MOLECULE; III. ELASTICITY OF A THREE-DIMENSIONAL NETWORK OF POLYMER MOLECULES; IV. COMPARISON WITH EXPERIMENT; V. CONTINUUM THEORY OF RUBBER ELASTICITY; VI. SECOND-ORDER STRESSES; VII. ELASTIC BEHAVIOR UNDER SMALL DEFORMATIONS; VIII. SOME UNSOLVED PROBLEMS IN RUBBER ELASTICITY; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES2. Polymerization: Elastomer SynthesisI. INTRODUCTION; II. CLASSIFICATION OF POLYMERIZATION REACTIONS AND KINETIC CONSIDERATIONS; III. Polyaddition/Polycondensation; IV. CHAIN POLYMERIZATION BY FREE RADICAL MECHANISM; V. EMULSION POLYMERIZATION; VI. COPOLYMERIZATION; VII. Chain Polymerization by Cationic Mechanism; VIII. CHAIN POLYMERIZATION BY ANIONIC MECHANISM; IX. STEREOSPECIFIC CHAIN POLYMERIZATION AND COPOLYMERIZATION BY COORDINATION CATALYSTS; X. GRAFT AND BLOCK COPOLYMERIZATION; REFERENCES; 3. Structure Characterization in the Science and Technology of Elastomers; I. INTRODUCTIONII. CHEMICAL COMPOSITIONIII. SEQUENCE DISTRIBUTION OF REPEAT UNITS; IV. CHAIN ARCHITECTURE; V. GLASS TRANSITION AND SECONDARY RELAXATION PROCESSES; VI. MORPHOLOGY; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; 4. The Molecular Basis of Rubberlike Elasticity; I. INTRODUCTION; II. STRUCTURE OF A TYPICAL NETWORK; III. ELEMENTARY MOLECULAR THEORIES; IV. MORE ADVANCED MOLECULAR THEORIES; V. PHENOMENOLOGICAL THEORIES AND MOLECULAR STRUCTURE; VI. SWELLING OF NETWORKS AND RESPONSIVE GELS; VII. ENTHALPIC AND ENTROPIC CONTRIBUTIONS TO RUBBER ELASTICITY: FORCE-TEMPERATURE RELATIONSVIII. DIRECT DETERMINATION OF MOLECULAR DIMENSIONSIX. SINGLE-MOLECULE ELASTICITY; REFERENCES; 5. The Viscoelastic Behavior of Rubber; I. INTRODUCTION; II. DEFINITIONS OF MEASURED QUANTITIES, J(t), G(t), AND G*(ω), AND SPECTRA L(log λ) AND H(log τ); III. THE GLASS TEMPERATURE; IV. VOLUME CHANGES DURING CURING; V. VISCOELASTIC BEHAVIOR ABOVE Tg; VI. VISCOELASTIC BEHAVIOR OF OTHER MODEL ELASTOMERS; VII. THE CALCULATION OF THE TEAR ENERGY OF ELASTOMERS FROM THEIR VISCOELASTIC BEHAVIOR; VIII. THEORETICAL INTERPRETATION OF VISCOELASTIC MECHANISMS AND ANOMALIES; IX. APPENDIX: NOMENCLATUREREFERENCES6. Rheological Behavior and Processing of Unvulcanized Rubber; I. INTRODUCTION; II. BASIC CONCEPTS OF MECHANICS; III. RHEOLOGICAL PROPERTIES; IV. BOUNDARY CONDITIONS; V. MECHANOCHEMICAL BEHAVIOR; VI. RHEOLOGICAL MEASUREMENTS; VII. PROCESSING TECHNOLOGY; VIII. ENGINEERING ANALYSIS OF PROCESSING; REFERENCES; 7. Vulcanization; I. INTRODUCTION; II. DEFINITION OF VULCANIZATION; III. EFFECTS OF VULCANIZATION ON VULCANIZATE PROPERTIES; IV. CHARACTERIZATION OF THE VULCANIZATION PROCESS; V. VULCANIZATION BY SULFUR WITHOUT ACCELERATOR; VI. ACCELERATED-SULFUR VULCANIZATIONVII. VULCANIZATION BY PHENOLIC CURATIVES, BENZOQUINONE DERIVATIVES, OR BISMALEIMIDESThe 3rd edition of The Science and Technology of Rubber provides a broad survey of elastomers with special emphasis on materials with a rubber-like elasticity. As in the 2nd edition, the emphasis remains on a unified treatment of the material; exploring topics from the chemical aspects such as elastomer synthesis and curing, through recent theoretical developments and characterization of equilibrium and dynamic properties, to the final applications of rubber, including tire engineering and manufacturing. Many advances have been made in polymer and elastomers research over the past teRubberRubber.678/.2Mark James E.1934-22309Erman Burak1823610MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911006693703321Science and technology of rubber4390360UNINA