CHF 91.00

Fifty Materials That Make the World

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 6 to 7 weeks

Description

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This book introduces materials and how advances in materials result in advances in technology and our daily lives. Each chapter covers a particular material, how the material was discovered or invented, when it was first used, how this material has impacted the world, what makes the material important, how it is used today, and future applications. The list of materials covered in this book includes stone, wood, natural fibers, metals, clay, lead, iron, steel, silicon, glass, rubber, composites, polyethylene, rare earth magnet, and alloys.

About the author

Ian Baker is a Professor of Engineering at Dartmouth College. His research interests include mechanical behavior of metallic alloys, magnetic materials, ice and snow, phase transformations, electron microscopy, and x-ray techniques.

Summary

Provides a concise introduction to various materials with broad day-to-day applications
Describes how the uses of certain materials were discovered and their importance in today’s world
Examines how advances in materials underlie and enable advances in technology
Covers a wide range of materials including stone, wood, leather, cloth, natural fibers, gold, and numerous alloys

Additional text

“This fascinating and useful book, aimed at a wide readership, adopts the point of view that human civilization has been materials-based throughout its history. … Readers with a basic (high school level) understanding of chemistry or physics can easily grasp the material. … the selection of 50 solid materials is quite thorough; readers will be hard pressed to name solid materials important to human history that were omitted. Summing Up: Recommended. All levels.” (J. Lambropoulos, Choice, Vol. 56 (5), January, 2019)

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"This fascinating and useful book, aimed at a wide readership, adopts the point of view that human civilization has been materials-based throughout its history. ... Readers with a basic (high school level) understanding of chemistry or physics can easily grasp the material. ... the selection of 50 solid materials is quite thorough; readers will be hard pressed to name solid materials important to human history that were omitted. Summing Up: Recommended. All levels." (J. Lambropoulos, Choice, Vol. 56 (5), January, 2019)

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