Photonic Sintering of Silver Nanoparticles: Comparison of Experiment and Theory

  • West J
  • Carter M
  • Smith S
  • et al.
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Abstract

This book is addressed to a large and multidisciplinary audience of researchers and students dealing with or interested in sintering. Though commonly known as a method for production of objects from fines or powders, sintering is a very complex physicochemical phenomenon. It is complex because it involves a number of phenomena exhibiting themselves in various heterogeneous material systems, in a wide temperature range, and in different physical states. It is multidisciplinary research area because understanding of sintering requires a broad knowledge - from solid state physics and fluid dynamics to thermodynamics and kinetics of chemical reactions. Finally, sintering is not only a phenomenon. As a material processing method, sintering embraces the wide group of technologies used to obtain such different products as for example iron ore agglomerate and luminescent powders. As a matter of fact, this publication is a rare opportunity to connect the researchers involved in different domains of sintering in a single book. How

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West, J., Carter, M., Smith, S., & Sears, J. (2012). Photonic Sintering of Silver Nanoparticles: Comparison of Experiment and Theory. In Sintering - Methods and Products. InTech. https://doi.org/10.5772/33519

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