The Nonlinear History of Fibre Flow Research. Part 2: Continuation, Reflections and Suggestions

Technical fibre flows are normally flocky but have theoretically mainly been treated as individual fibre flows. The reason for this can only be understood through the subject’s historic development. In Part 1 of this investigation the origin of fibre flow research was traced to the beginning of the...

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Main Author: Björkman Ulf
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2008-06-01
Series:Applied Rheology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/arh-2008-0011
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spelling doaj-84528991d1c746a2a494c09ae130ef2f2021-09-06T19:40:02ZengDe GruyterApplied Rheology1617-81062008-06-0118334694-134694-2610.1515/arh-2008-0011The Nonlinear History of Fibre Flow Research. Part 2: Continuation, Reflections and SuggestionsBjörkman Ulf0Department of Fibre and Polymer Technology, Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), 100 44Stockholm, SwedenTechnical fibre flows are normally flocky but have theoretically mainly been treated as individual fibre flows. The reason for this can only be understood through the subject’s historic development. In Part 1 of this investigation the origin of fibre flow research was traced to the beginning of the 19th century, and was followed through its formative years at the first half of the 20th century up to about WWII. This second and final part takes us up to about the 1960s when the present main theoretical research tradition had been firmly established. An example of an alternative approach is given. Finally, some suggestions for future work are advanced. In Appendix methods of characterising the inner geometry of technical fibre suspensions are discussedhttps://doi.org/10.1515/arh-2008-0011fibre flowfibre suspensionresearch history
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Björkman Ulf
spellingShingle Björkman Ulf
The Nonlinear History of Fibre Flow Research. Part 2: Continuation, Reflections and Suggestions
Applied Rheology
fibre flow
fibre suspension
research history
author_facet Björkman Ulf
author_sort Björkman Ulf
title The Nonlinear History of Fibre Flow Research. Part 2: Continuation, Reflections and Suggestions
title_short The Nonlinear History of Fibre Flow Research. Part 2: Continuation, Reflections and Suggestions
title_full The Nonlinear History of Fibre Flow Research. Part 2: Continuation, Reflections and Suggestions
title_fullStr The Nonlinear History of Fibre Flow Research. Part 2: Continuation, Reflections and Suggestions
title_full_unstemmed The Nonlinear History of Fibre Flow Research. Part 2: Continuation, Reflections and Suggestions
title_sort nonlinear history of fibre flow research. part 2: continuation, reflections and suggestions
publisher De Gruyter
series Applied Rheology
issn 1617-8106
publishDate 2008-06-01
description Technical fibre flows are normally flocky but have theoretically mainly been treated as individual fibre flows. The reason for this can only be understood through the subject’s historic development. In Part 1 of this investigation the origin of fibre flow research was traced to the beginning of the 19th century, and was followed through its formative years at the first half of the 20th century up to about WWII. This second and final part takes us up to about the 1960s when the present main theoretical research tradition had been firmly established. An example of an alternative approach is given. Finally, some suggestions for future work are advanced. In Appendix methods of characterising the inner geometry of technical fibre suspensions are discussed
topic fibre flow
fibre suspension
research history
url https://doi.org/10.1515/arh-2008-0011
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