polymer : ÀÚÀ¯¾ÆÄ«µ¥¹Ì °íºÐÀÚÈÇÐ ÀÔ¹® 3ÆÇ ¼Ö·ç¼Ç (Polymer Chemistry An Introduction , Malcolm P.Stevens) Down
polymer : ÀÚÀ¯¾ÆÄ«µ¥¹Ì °íºÐÀÚÈÇÐ ÀÔ¹® 3ÆÇ ¼Ö·ç¼Ç (Polymer Chemistry An Introduction , Malcolm P.Stevens)
°íºÐÀÚ ÀÔ¹® 3ÆÇ Malcolm P. stevens ÀÚ·áÈ®ÀÎ ÈÄ ¿Ã¸³´Ï´Ù. Àü éÅÍ ¿¬½À¹®Á¦ ¼Ö·ç¼ÇÀÔ´Ï´Ù.
PROBLEM 1.1 FIND: Explain the hierarchy of standards. Explain the term standard. Cite example. SOLUTION
The term standard refers to an object or instrument, a method or a procedure that provides a value of an acceptable accuracy for comparison. A primary standard defines the value of the unit to which it is associated. Secondary standards, while based on the primary standard, are more readily accessible and amenable for use in a calibration. There is a hierarchy of secondary standards: A transfer standard might be maintained by a national standards lab (such as NIST in the United States) to calibrate industrial ¡°laboratory standards¡±. It is costly and time-consuming to certify a laboratory standard, so they are treated carefully and not used too regularly. A laboratory standard would be maintained by a company to be used to certify a more common in-house reference called the working standard. A working standard would be calibrated against the laboratory standard. The working standar
ÀÚ·áÃâó : http://www.allreport.co.kr/search/detail.asp?pk=11040333&sid=knp868group1&key=polymer
[¹®¼Á¤º¸]
¹®¼ºÐ·® : 80 Page
ÆÄÀÏÁ¾·ù : PDF ÆÄÀÏ
ÀÚ·áÁ¦¸ñ :
ÆÄÀÏÀ̸§ : [¼Ö·ç¼Ç] °íºÐÀÚÈÇÐ ÀÔ¹® 3ÆÇ (Polymer Chemistry - An Introduction, Malcolm P.Stevens - ÀÚÀ¯¾ÆÄ«µ¥¹Ì)[2].pdf
Ű¿öµå : °íºÐÀÚ,ÈÇÐ,ÀÔ¹®,¼Ö·ç¼Ç,polymer,:,ÀÚÀ¯¾ÆÄ«µ¥¹Ì,°íºÐÀÚÈÇÐ,3ÆÇ,Polymer
- °íºÐÀÚÈÇÐ 3ÆÇ ¼Ö·ç¼Ç (contemporary polymer chemistry 3rd) Alcock ch3 , 5 , 10~18 , 20~23 (ÁÖ¿ä¹®Á¦¸¸ ¼ö·Ï)
- °íºÐÀÚÈÇÐ (contempory polymer chemistry) , Harry R. Allcock , Pearson ¼Ö·ç¼Ç
- °íºÐÀÚÈÇÐ 3ÆÇ ¼Ö·ç¼Ç (Contemporary Polymer Chemistry 3rd Edition , Harry R. Allcock)
- °íºÐÀÚ ÈÇÐ ÀÔ¹® 3ÆÇ ¼Ö·ç¼Ç (polymer chemistry an introduction)
- ÀÚÀ¯¾ÆÄ«µ¥¹Ì °íºÐÀÚÈÇÐ ÀÔ¹® 3ÆÇ ¼Ö·ç¼Ç (Polymer Chemistry An Introduction , Malcolm P.Stevens)