The Wood Composite Materials of Table Tennis Bat and Batting Techniques

2012 ◽  
Vol 583 ◽  
pp. 49-52
Author(s):  
Zhong Hai Wang ◽  
Ru Jian Yuan ◽  
Xiao Bing Fan

With the table tennis technical innovation and improvement of science, high-performance materials are used to manufacture of table tennis plate floor and help athletes have achieved better results. This article elaborated the wood composite materials’s impact on batting techniques through the analysis of the function of table tennis racket floor and its structure and capacity based on material science for provide the reference on manufacturing and selecting of table tennis racket.

TAPPI Journal ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 17 (09) ◽  
pp. 507-515 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Skuse ◽  
Mark Windebank ◽  
Tafadzwa Motsi ◽  
Guillaume Tellier

When pulp and minerals are co-processed in aqueous suspension, the mineral acts as a grinding aid, facilitating the cost-effective production of fibrils. Furthermore, this processing allows the utilization of robust industrial milling equipment. There are 40000 dry metric tons of mineral/microfbrillated (MFC) cellulose composite production capacity in operation across three continents. These mineral/MFC products have been cleared by the FDA for use as a dry and wet strength agent in coated and uncoated food contact paper and paperboard applications. We have previously reported that use of these mineral/MFC composite materials in fiber-based applications allows generally improved wet and dry mechanical properties with concomitant opportunities for cost savings, property improvements, or grade developments and that the materials can be prepared using a range of fibers and minerals. Here, we: (1) report the development of new products that offer improved performance, (2) compare the performance of these new materials with that of a range of other nanocellulosic material types, (3) illustrate the performance of these new materials in reinforcement (paper and board) and viscosification applications, and (4) discuss product form requirements for different applications.


1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Crasto ◽  
D. Anderson ◽  
R. Esterline ◽  
K. Han ◽  
C. Hill

2017 ◽  
Vol 755 ◽  
pp. 286-291 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dávid Ágoston Balázs ◽  
Zoltán Nyikes ◽  
Tünde Kovács

Building protection on our century is very important because of the terrorist attacks. The old buildings in Europe aren’t enough strong again blast loads. Nowadays we know many different explosives and theirs effects of walls and human bodies. The detonation caused blast effect provokes building damage and fragmentation effects. The explosion caused damages, parts of bricks and fragments produce other secondary damage in other buildings and human bodies.It can’t protect the historical and old buildings by new walls and fences because of the cityscape. It needs to find new possibilities to improve the buildings resistance again blast effects. It needs a effectively thin and strong materials to reinforced the buildings walls. The new materials innovated by material science can be good solution for this project. These materials usually composites likes syntactic foams, spherical shells or carbon fields reinforced composites.


Author(s):  
Vadim Kondrashev ◽  
Sergey Denisov

The paper discusses methods and algorithms for the provision of high-performance computing resources in multicomputer systems in a shared mode for fundamental and applied research in the field of materials science. Approaches are proposed for the application of applied integrated software environments (frameworks) designed to solve material science problems using virtualization and parallel computing technologies.


Author(s):  
Oksana Morozova ◽  
Edwin Gevorkyan

This descriptive review presents current knowledge about the bioengineering use of a zirconium dioxide, the advantages and disadvantages of the material, and the prospects for research in this direction. The work reflects the success of the practical application of the zirconium dioxide as a material for dental structures and biological implants. Such practical characteristics, such as color-stability, chemical stability, good aesthetics, biocompatibility and durability, allowed to actively use the zirconium dioxide as a material for producing various dental structures. In comparison with other ceramics, the presence of high-performance of strength and fracture toughness of the zirconium dioxide enables the use of this material as an alternative material for the reconstructions in the readings with considerable loads. High hardness determines the zirconium dioxide as an excellent material for articular prostheses, because of its hardness, provides a low level of wear and excellent biocompatibility. However, along with positive characteristics, a widespread practical problem of using the zirconium dioxide in dentistry is a chip or fracture of veneering ceramics. It has also been reported that there is a shortage of orthopedic implants such as hydrothermal stability. The solution of such problems is indicated and the use of composite materials based on the zirconium dioxide, which allows to solve a similar problem, as well as to increase the service life and reliability of orthopedic implants by providing a higher fracture toughness and mechanical strength. The existence of such composite materials based on the zirconium dioxide provides a significant increase in the wear resistance of orthopedic implants, which is essential for successful prosthetics


2008 ◽  
Vol 86 (6) ◽  
pp. 484-494 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alain Dufresne

There are numerous examples of animals or plants that synthesize extracellular high-performance skeletal biocomposites consisting of a matrix reinforced by nano sized crystalline domains. Cellulose and chitin are classical examples of these reinforcing elements, which occur as whisker-like microfibrils that are biosynthesized and deposited in a continuous fashion. In many cases, this mode of biogenesis leads to crystalline microfibrils that are almost defect-free, and whose axial physical properties therefore approach those of perfect crystals. During the last decade we have attempted to mimic biocomposites by blending cellulose or chitin whiskers from different sources with polymer matrices. Aqueous suspensions of such nano crystals can be prepared by acid hydrolysis of the substrate. The object of this treatment is to dissolve away regions of low lateral order so that the water-insoluble, highly crystalline residue may be converted into a stable suspensoid by subsequent vigorous mechanical shearing action. The resulting nano crystals occur as rod-like particles or whiskers, whose dimensions depend on the nature of the substrate. They are typically a few hundred nm long and between 5 and 20 nm in diameter. Starch can also be used as a source for the production of nano crystals. The constitutive nano crystals appear as platelet-like nano particles with a length ranging between 20 and 40 nm, a width ranging between 15 and 30 nm, and a thickness ranging between 5 and 7 nm. Since the first announcement of using cellulose whiskers as a reinforcing phase, they have been used extensively as model fillers in several kinds of polymeric matrices, including synthetic and natural ones. Casting mixtures of polysaccharide nano crystals and lattices led to the production of nano composite materials with drastically enhanced mechanical properties, especially at T > Tg of the matrix, by virtue of the formation of a whiskers network, even when the whisker volume fraction was only a few percent. The formation of this rigid network, resulting from strong interactions between whiskers, was assumed to be governed by a percolation mechanism. This hydrogen-bonded network induced a thermal stabilization of the composite up to 500 K, the temperature at which polysaccharides start to decompose. Any factors that perturb the formation of this percolating network directly affect the reinforcing effect of polysaccharide nano crystals. In addition to some practical applications, the study of these nano composite materials can help researchers understand such physical properties as the geometric and mechanical percolation effect.Key words: nano composites, polysaccharide, polymer, cellulose, nano crystal.


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