000 03168cam a22002294a 4500
008 1984
020 _a0471031968
040 _aGAMADERO
_bspa
_cGAMADERO
041 _aspa
050 0 0 _aQD 381.
_bB52
_c1984
100 _aFRED W. BILLMEYER JR.
_93986
245 0 0 _aTEXTBOOK OF POLYMER SCIENCE
250 _a3a. edición
260 3 _aWILEY
_bEstados Unidos
_c1984
300 _a578 pg.
_bilustrado
_c21 cm x 15.5 cm
505 _a"I am inclined to think that the development of polymerization is, perhaps, the biggest thing chemistry has done, where it has had the biggest effect on everyday life. The world would be a totally different place without artificial fibers, plastics, elastomers, etc. Even in the field of electronics, what would you do without insulation? And there you come back to polymers again."t And indeed one does. From the lowly throwaway candy wrapper to the artificial heart, polymers touch our lives as does no other class of materials, with no end to new uses and improved products in sight. Yet, many instances of the need for better education in the polymer field, both in our universities and for the public remain unchanged. Some of these were discussed at length in the Preface to the second edition of this book, which follows, and I shall not repeat them. The present revision has two major directions. The first is to improve its value as a textbook. To this end I have rearranged the text to consider polymerization before describing the properties of polymers, a change that several of my colleagues feel has pedagogical advantages. I have also drawn on my files from 25 years of teaching polymer science, at the University of Delaware, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, to provide material for a section on Discussion Questions and Problems at the end of each chapter. The second objective of the revision is the more common one, to bring the contents up-to-date by judicious addition, deletion, and revision, and in this I hope I have been successful. Many sections have been changed little, reflecting the maturity of certain aspects of polymer science, but the reader will find new material inserted in every chapter. A few additions of particular note are a section on polymerization reaction engineering in Chapter 6, a discussion of scaling concepts in Chapter 7, and expansion of the sections on polymer processing in Chapter 17.
520 _aI wish to thank many colleagues, both in the Polymer Science and Engineering Program at Rensselaer and elsewhere, for valuable suggestions that have been incorporated into this revision. Seventy-five Rensselaer students who used a first draft of about two-thirds of the text in the course Introduction to Polymer Chemistry also provided helpful ideas and corrections. The text was capably typed and retyped by Peggy Ruggeri. To her, to my graduate students, and especially to my patient wife Annette, I owe many thanks
526 _aIngenieria en Gestion Empresarial
650 0 _aFísica
_9821
942 _2lcc
_cLIB
_e3a. edición
945 _a1260
_bNorma Gabriela Corona Arreguin
_c1260
_dNorma Gabriela Corona Arreguin
999 _c9025
_d9025