Wiley-VCH, Weinheim Molecular Technology Cover "Molecular Technology" covers scientific improvements that enable a qualitative change of existing m.. Product #: 978-3-527-34161-0 Regular price: $139.25 $139.25 Auf Lager

Molecular Technology

Materials Innovation

Yamamoto, Hisashi / Kato, Takashi (Herausgeber)

Cover

1. Auflage April 2019
XVIII, 352 Seiten, Hardcover
50 Abbildungen (50 Farbabbildungen)
Handbuch/Nachschlagewerk

ISBN: 978-3-527-34161-0
Wiley-VCH, Weinheim

Kurzbeschreibung

"Molecular Technology" covers scientific improvements that enable a qualitative change of existing methods and processes in four volumes. Volume 3 focuses on those developments on material science.

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Edited by foremost leaders in chemical research together with a number of distinguished international authors, this third volume summarizes the most important and promising recent developments in material science in one book.
Interdisciplinary and application-oriented, this ready reference focuses on innovative methods, covering new developments in photofunctional materials, polymer chemistry, surface science and more. Of great interest to chemists as well as material scientists alike.

Control of electronic property of C60 fullerene via polymerization
Flapping molecules for photofunctional materials
Catechol-Containing Polymers: A Biomimetic Approach for Creating Novel Adhesive and Reducing Polymers
Development of Ultra-Microfabricating Polymeric Materials and ist Self-Assembly Technology
Molecular Simulations of Deformation and Fracture Processes of Crystalline Polymers
A Tale of chirality transfer, multi-step chirality transfer from molecules to molecular assemblies, organic to inorganic materials, then to functional materials
Solution Plasma Reactions and Materials Synthesis
"Global Reaction Route Mapping Strategy:
A Tool for Finding New Chemistry in Computers
Computational Molecular Technology towards Macroscopic Chemical Phenomena: Red Moon Methodology and its Related Applications
Multi-timescale Measurements with Energetic Beams for Molecular Technology
Single Molecule Magnet for Quantum Information Process'

Hisashi Yamamoto is Professor at the University of Chicago. He received his Ph.D. from Harvard under the mentorship of Professor E. J. Corey. His first academic position was as Assistant Professor and lecturer at Kyoto University, and in 1977 he was appointed Associate Professor of Chemistry at the University of Hawaii. In 1980 he moved to Nagoya University where he became Professor in 1983. In 2002, he moved to United States as Professor at the University of Chicago. He has been honored to receive the Prelog Medal in 1993, the Chemical Society of Japan Award in 1995, the National Prize of Purple Medal (Japan) in 2002, Yamada Prize in 2004, and Tetrahedron Prize in 2006 and the ACS Award for Creative Work in Synthetic Organic Chemistry to name a few. He authored more than 500 papers, 130 reviews and books (h-index ~90).

Takashi Kato is a Professor at the Department of Chemistry and Biotechnology at the University of Tokyo since 2000. After his postdoctoral research at Cornell University, Department of Chemistry with Professor Jean M. J. Frechet, he joined the University of Tokyo. He is the recipient of The Chemical Society of Japan Award for Young Chemists (1993), The Wiley Polymer Science Award (Chemistry), the 17th IBM Japan Science Award (Chemistry), the 1st JSPS (Japan Society for the Promotion of Science) Prize and the Award of Japanese Liquid Crystal Society (2008). He is the editor in chief of the "Polymer Journal", and member of the editorial board of "New Journal of Chemistry".