Home

iMechanica

web of mechanics and mechanicians
  • recent posts
  • user list
  • about
  • contact
  • poll
  • research
  • education
  • mechanician
  • opinion
  • software
  • industry
  • conference
  • job
  • video

User login

  • Create new account
  • Request new password

Navigation

  • Post a new blog entry

Active forum topics

  • need help for ANSYS
  • about Ansys Ls-Dyna
  • Modelling isotropic hardening
  • Modeling concrete wrapped CFRP sheet using ANSYS
  • composite modelling
more

Recent blog posts

  • Postdoc position at Northeastern: Soft Matter, Thin shells and Biomimetic materials and structures
  • New Release of General Purpose Micromechanics Code: VAMUCH 3.0
  • tsai wu failure criteria in ANSYS
  • Your preferences in scientific/engineering/numerical programming
  • Question PFC2D
  • cracks in A380? Every plane now in the air is an experiment by itself...
  • 8th International Conference on Fracture Mechanics of Concrete and Concrete Structures, March 10-14,2013, Toledo-Spain
  • Pleased to see
  • Mary Boyce and Huajian Gao elected to the National Academy of Engineering
  • Computational mechanics of cells, tissues, and biomaterials (ECOMASS 2012), DEADLINE EXTENDED to FEBRUARY 29
more
Home » content

KMHP-100

Submitted by Mo Kebaili on Mon, 2008-06-23 16:45.
  • industry
  • carbon nanotubes
  • chemical sensor
  • kebaili
  • MEMS
  • microhotplate
  • Nanoparticles
  • nanotechnology
  • nanowires
  • polymer
  • sol-gel

KMHP-100
»
  • Login or register to post comments
  • thumbnail
  • 2497 reads

Quick guide

  • Ask iMechanica
  • Having difficulty with posting comments?
  • How to add an image
  • How to post an entry
  • Journal Club
  • Lecture notes
  • RSS Feeds
  • FAQ

Similar links

  • KMHP-100 MEMS Microhotplate Operating at 650°C

Recent comments

  • hi contact me by
    4 hours 26 min ago
  • damage modeling
    10 hours 49 min ago
  • tsai wu failure criteria in ANSYS
    11 hours 29 min ago
  • ANSYS modelling
    12 hours 58 min ago
  • Biswajit, interesting comments. But why parochial?
    14 hours 32 min ago
  • Meritocratic criteria
    14 hours 45 min ago
  • Xose and Alan, do you know of this Andrew Oswald paper?
    15 hours 2 min ago
  • wallster, both and none, ubt the point is another!
    17 hours 43 min ago
  • Riks method in ABAQUS
    20 hours 11 min ago
  • Soft machines: increased functionality and extreme performance
    23 hours 47 min ago

More comments

  • comments at a glance

Popular content

Today's:

  • cracks in A380? Every plane now in the air is an experiment by itself...
  • How do Italian Universities compare with British Universities, and the importance of Charles Dickens.
  • Pleased to see
  • tsai wu failure criteria in ANSYS
  • ABAQUS Tutorial and Assignment #1
  • Your preferences in scientific/engineering/numerical programming
  • I share the vision of iMechanica, but am not ready to post anything, should I register?
  • Journal Club Theme of February 2012: Elastic Instabilities for Form and Function
  • Modeling concrete wrapped CFRP sheet using ANSYS
  • Modelling isotropic hardening

What we talked about

  • ABAQUS tutorial
  • ABAQUS UMAT
  • Cauchy stress
  • in situ Mechanics
  • Logarithmic strain
  • Mechanics of growth
  • Mesh-free methods
  • Objective rates of stress
  • Plastic potential
  • Poroelasticity
  • Stress and strain
  • Temperature
  • tensor and its invariants
  • Timoshenko lectures
  • Viscoelasticity
  • Why is rubber incompressible?
  • Writing a paper
  • Writing a proposal

Online now

There are currently 4 users and 109 guests online.

Sites of interest

  • AAM
  • AMD
  • Buckled Shells
  • CFD online
  • eFluids
  • Electroactive polymers
  • EMI
  • Energy science reports
  • Entertaining research
  • IUTAM
  • PolymerFEM
  • PoroNet
  • SES
  • Soft Matter World
  • USNC/TAM

Syndicate

Syndicate content
Each entry is © copyright 2006-2012 by the individual user and can be used in accordance with the Creative Commons License. iMechanica is powered by Drupal, and hosted at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.