
From Additive Manufacturing to 3D/4D Printing 3
Description
Alles über E-Books | Antworten auf Fragen rund um E-Books, Kopierschutz und Dateiformate finden Sie in unserem Info- & Hilfebereich.
More details
Other editions
Additional editions

Content
2 - Half-Title Page [Seite 3]
3 - Title Page [Seite 5]
4 - Copyright Page [Seite 6]
5 - Contents [Seite 7]
6 - Acknowledgments [Seite 11]
7 - Foreword [Seite 13]
8 - Preface [Seite 17]
9 - Introduction [Seite 31]
10 - PART 1. Programmable Smart/Intelligent Matter and 4D Printing [Seite 41]
10.1 - Introduction to Part 1 [Seite 43]
10.2 - 1. Programmable Matter or Smart Matter, Stimulated Organization and 4D Printing [Seite 55]
10.2.1 - 1.1. Introduction [Seite 56]
10.2.2 - 1.2. Natural (spontaneous) self-organization [Seite 57]
10.2.2.1 - 1.2.1. Nonlinearities [Seite 58]
10.2.2.2 - 1.2.2. Achieving the desired form? [Seite 61]
10.2.3 - 1.3. "Smart" matter [Seite 65]
10.2.3.1 - 1.3.1. Active polymers: photochemical muscles [Seite 66]
10.2.3.2 - 1.3.2. Physical alterations [Seite 77]
10.2.3.3 - 1.3.3. Distortion of metal parts [Seite 79]
10.2.3.4 - 1.3.4. Conclusion [Seite 81]
10.2.4 - 1.4. A transition to 4D printing: swimming robots [Seite 81]
10.2.5 - 1.5. 4D Printing [Seite 86]
10.2.5.1 - 1.5.1. Automation and robots [Seite 88]
10.2.5.2 - 1.5.2. Origami [Seite 93]
10.2.5.3 - 1.5.3. Octobot [Seite 97]
10.2.5.4 - 1.5.4. Massive objects [Seite 97]
10.2.6 - 1.6. Conclusion [Seite 100]
10.2.7 - 1.7. Bibliography [Seite 103]
11 - PART 2. Live "Smart" Matter and (Bio-printing) [Seite 119]
11.1 - Introduction to Part 2 [Seite 121]
11.1.1 - I.1. Introduction [Seite 123]
11.1.2 - I.2. Background [Seite 130]
11.1.3 - I.3. Bibliography [Seite 136]
11.2 - 2. Bio-printing Technologies [Seite 143]
11.2.1 - 2.1. Introduction [Seite 144]
11.2.2 - 2.2. Tissue complexity [Seite 148]
11.2.3 - 2.3. Bio-printing technologies [Seite 156]
11.2.3.1 - 2.3.1. Cell preparation [Seite 160]
11.2.3.2 - 2.3.2. Generic bio-printing technologies [Seite 162]
11.2.3.3 - 2.3.3. Materials [Seite 173]
11.2.3.4 - 2.3.4. Process-material couplings [Seite 178]
11.2.3.5 - 2.3.5. Subsequent cell growth [Seite 180]
11.2.4 - 2.4. Comment: 4D bio-printing [Seite 182]
11.2.5 - 2.5. Other applications [Seite 182]
11.2.5.1 - 2.5.1. Biological applications [Seite 182]
11.2.5.2 - 2.5.2. Is it possible to feed ourselves thanks to bio-printing? [Seite 184]
11.2.5.3 - 2.5.3. Bioluminescence and electronics [Seite 184]
11.2.5.4 - 2.5.4. Bio-printed Bio-bots or "soft robots" produced by additive manufacturing [Seite 184]
11.2.6 - 2.6. Conclusion [Seite 187]
11.2.7 - 2.7. Appendix: 3D printing for biological applications [Seite 189]
11.2.8 - 2.8. Bibliography [Seite 191]
11.3 - 3. Some Examples of 3D Bio-printed Tissues [Seite 209]
11.3.1 - 3.1. Introduction [Seite 210]
11.3.2 - 3.2. Work on cartilage [Seite 212]
11.3.2.1 - 3.2.1. General remarks on cartilage [Seite 213]
11.3.2.2 - 3.2.2. Cartilaginous defects and treatments [Seite 217]
11.3.2.3 - 3.2.3. Cartilage bio-printing [Seite 218]
11.3.2.4 - 3.2.4. Primary results [Seite 223]
11.3.3 - 3.3. Skin bio-printing [Seite 227]
11.3.3.1 - 3.3.1. General remarks on skin [Seite 228]
11.3.3.2 - 3.3.2. Bio-printing skin [Seite 230]
11.3.3.3 - 3.3.3. Conclusion [Seite 235]
11.3.4 - 3.4. Bone [Seite 235]
11.3.4.1 - 3.4.1. General remarks on the composition of bone [Seite 236]
11.3.4.2 - 3.4.2. Bone bio-printing [Seite 238]
11.3.4.3 - 3.4.3. Conclusion [Seite 240]
11.3.5 - 3.5. Bio-printing and cancer [Seite 240]
11.3.5.1 - 3.5.1. Examples [Seite 241]
11.3.5.2 - 3.5.2. Conclusion and perspectives [Seite 243]
11.3.6 - 3.6. General Conclusion [Seite 244]
11.3.7 - 3.7. Bibliography [Seite 246]
11.4 - 4. Ethical Issues and Responsible Parties [Seite 257]
11.4.1 - 4.1. Introduction [Seite 258]
11.4.2 - 4.2. Reflection on the acceptance of bio-printing [Seite 259]
11.4.2.1 - 4.2.1. Raw survey data [Seite 261]
11.4.2.2 - 4.2.2. General discussion: whom to trust? [Seite 279]
11.4.2.3 - 4.2.3. Preliminary conclusion [Seite 280]
11.4.3 - 4.3. Ethics and bio-printing [Seite 286]
11.4.3.1 - 4.3.1. Framing elements [Seite 290]
11.4.3.2 - 4.3.2. Return on the concept of ethics [Seite 294]
11.4.3.3 - 4.3.3. What can be foreseen? [Seite 301]
11.4.3.4 - 4.3.4. Conclusion [Seite 315]
11.4.4 - 4.4. Governing bio-printing research: mastering convergence [Seite 319]
11.4.4.1 - 4.4.1. Return to 3D printing [Seite 320]
11.4.4.2 - 4.4.2. Promises of NBIC convergence and bio-printing [Seite 323]
11.4.4.3 - 4.4.3. Convergence [Seite 326]
11.4.4.4 - 4.4.4. Comparisons [Seite 327]
11.4.4.5 - 4.4.5. Epistemological questions [Seite 332]
11.4.5 - 4.5. Conclusion [Seite 337]
11.4.6 - 4.6. Bibliography [Seite 340]
11.5 - 5. Questions of Epistemology and Modeling [Seite 355]
11.5.1 - 5.1. Introduction [Seite 356]
11.5.2 - 5.2. The PE approach (seen by a possible divergent, somewhat of an HE) [AND 16] [Seite 364]
11.5.3 - 5.3. The HE approach [Seite 369]
11.5.4 - 5.4. Complexity and bio-printing [Seite 373]
11.5.4.1 - 5.4.1. Complexity? [Seite 374]
11.5.4.2 - 5.4.2. Initial reflection for action [Seite 380]
11.5.5 - 5.5. Return to complexity [Seite 385]
11.5.5.1 - 5.5.1. Complexity and system approach [Seite 390]
11.5.6 - 5.6. Bases of reflection on modeling [Seite 399]
11.5.6.1 - 5.6.1. Shooting or Monte-Carlo methods [Seite 399]
11.5.6.2 - 5.6.2. Analogy with David Bohm's works? [Seite 403]
11.5.6.3 - 5.6.3. Cellular differentiation [Seite 403]
11.5.6.4 - 5.6.4. Scale change(s) [Seite 406]
11.5.6.5 - 5.6.5. Questions for realistic modeling [Seite 406]
11.5.6.6 - 5.6.6. Provision of an operatory reference [Seite 407]
11.5.6.7 - 5.6.7. Organizational methodology [Seite 409]
11.5.7 - 5.7. Conclusion [Seite 415]
11.5.8 - 5.8. Bibliography [Seite 418]
12 - Conclusion [Seite 433]
13 - Postface [Seite 437]
14 - Index [Seite 459]
15 - Other titles from iSTE in Systems and Industrial Engineering - Robotics [Seite 461]
16 - EULA [Seite 471]
System requirements
File format: PDF
Copy-Protection: Adobe-DRM (Digital Rights Management)
System requirements:
- Computer (Windows; MacOS X; Linux): Install the free reader Adobe Digital Editions prior to download (see eBook Help).
- Tablet/smartphone (Android; iOS): Install the free app Adobe Digital Editions or the app PocketBook before downloading (see eBook Help).
- E-reader: Bookeen, Kobo, Pocketbook, Sony, Tolino and many more (only limited: Kindle).
The file format PDF always displays a book page identically on any hardware. This makes PDF suitable for complex layouts such as those used in textbooks and reference books (images, tables, columns, footnotes). Unfortunately, on the small screens of e-readers or smartphones, PDFs are rather annoying, requiring too much scrolling.
This eBook uses Adobe-DRM, a „hard” copy protection. If the necessary requirements are not met, unfortunately you will not be able to open the eBook. You will therefore need to prepare your reading hardware before downloading.
Please note: We strongly recommend that you authorise using your personal Adobe ID after installation of any reading software.
For more information, see our eBook Help page.