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Dynamics of Fibre Formation and Processing: Modelling and Application in Fibre and Textile Industry

Roland Beyreuther Harald Brünig

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Polymer Sciences; Characterization and Evaluation of Materials; Condensed Matter Physics; Industrial Chemistry/Chemical Engineering

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2007 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-3-540-46221-7

ISBN electrónico

978-3-540-46223-1

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2007

Tabla de contenidos

Introduction

Roland Beyreuther; Harald Brünig

The results of the present study document that a significant low-frequency hearing loss occurrs as early as in one-month-old F344 rats and results in a lack of recordable TEOAEs and in the absence of DPOAEs at low frequencies. The low-frequency defect, which preceeds the later occurring high-frequency hearing loss, is probably not connected with the degeneration of hair cells or specific age-related hearing loss genes, but can be related to more general genetic mutations present in this rat strain.

Pp. 1-4

Steady State and Non-Steady State Technological Processes

Roland Beyreuther; Harald Brünig

The results of the present study document that a significant low-frequency hearing loss occurrs as early as in one-month-old F344 rats and results in a lack of recordable TEOAEs and in the absence of DPOAEs at low frequencies. The low-frequency defect, which preceeds the later occurring high-frequency hearing loss, is probably not connected with the degeneration of hair cells or specific age-related hearing loss genes, but can be related to more general genetic mutations present in this rat strain.

Pp. 5-42

Modelling of Steady State Fibre Formation Process in Melt Spinning

Roland Beyreuther; Harald Brünig

The results of the present study document that a significant low-frequency hearing loss occurrs as early as in one-month-old F344 rats and results in a lack of recordable TEOAEs and in the absence of DPOAEs at low frequencies. The low-frequency defect, which preceeds the later occurring high-frequency hearing loss, is probably not connected with the degeneration of hair cells or specific age-related hearing loss genes, but can be related to more general genetic mutations present in this rat strain.

Pp. 43-143

Dynamics of Fibre Formation Processes

Roland Beyreuther; Harald Brünig

The results of the present study document that a significant low-frequency hearing loss occurrs as early as in one-month-old F344 rats and results in a lack of recordable TEOAEs and in the absence of DPOAEs at low frequencies. The low-frequency defect, which preceeds the later occurring high-frequency hearing loss, is probably not connected with the degeneration of hair cells or specific age-related hearing loss genes, but can be related to more general genetic mutations present in this rat strain.

Pp. 145-208

Dynamics of Fibre Processing Processes

Roland Beyreuther; Harald Brünig

The results of the present study document that a significant low-frequency hearing loss occurrs as early as in one-month-old F344 rats and results in a lack of recordable TEOAEs and in the absence of DPOAEs at low frequencies. The low-frequency defect, which preceeds the later occurring high-frequency hearing loss, is probably not connected with the degeneration of hair cells or specific age-related hearing loss genes, but can be related to more general genetic mutations present in this rat strain.

Pp. 209-276

Dynamics of the Tensile Force and its Importance for Process Stability

Roland Beyreuther; Harald Brünig

The results of the present study document that a significant low-frequency hearing loss occurrs as early as in one-month-old F344 rats and results in a lack of recordable TEOAEs and in the absence of DPOAEs at low frequencies. The low-frequency defect, which preceeds the later occurring high-frequency hearing loss, is probably not connected with the degeneration of hair cells or specific age-related hearing loss genes, but can be related to more general genetic mutations present in this rat strain.

Pp. 277-309