From 1953 when Gibbon first successfully supported a patient with extracorporeal circulation to about 1980 many different types of oxygenators were developed. Since their introduction in the early 1980s, microporous hollow fiber oxygenators with blood flow outside the fiber have become the dominant type of oxygenator in use. Their success has been due to both the ability to specify the required properties for a good oxygenator and the application of modern design tools, especially computational fluid dynamics, to the design process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBased on the assumption that bone breaks where it is weakest, so that the fracture surface represents the weakest area locally, a fractographic study was made of a series of accidental and experimental fractures of human long bones. The architecture of the fracture surfaces as a whole, and of the local morphology of the fractured microstructure, was examined. This led to a classification of the fractographic features observed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrans Am Soc Artif Intern Organs
January 1979
Trans Am Soc Artif Intern Organs
May 1975