Description

Book Synopsis
Nanoscience is not physics, chemistry, engineering or biology. It is all of them, and it is time for a text that integrates the disciplines. This is such a text, aimed at advanced undergraduates and beginning graduate students in the sciences. The consequences of smallness and quantum behaviour are well known and described Richard Feynman''s visionary essay ''There''s Plenty of Room at the Bottom'' (which is reproduced in this book). Another, critical, but thus far neglected, aspect of nanoscience is the complexity of nanostructures. Hundreds, thousands or hundreds of thousands of atoms make up systems that are complex enough to show what is fashionably called ''emergent behaviour''. Quite new phenomena arise from rare configurations of the system. Examples are the Kramer''s theory of reactions (Chapter 3), the Marcus theory of electron transfer (Chapter 8), and enzyme catalysis, molecular motors, and fluctuations in gene expression and splicing, all covered in the final Chapter on Nan

Trade Review
The book covers a lot of ground and combines a thoroughness of treatment with a lightness of touch. It is attractive for both undergraduate students seeking clear explanations and graduate students wanting depth. * Stephen Blundell, Oxford University *

Table of Contents
PART I: THE BASICS ; PART II: TOOLS ; PART III: APPLICATIONS

Introduction to Nanoscience

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    A Paperback by Stuart Lindsay

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      View other formats and editions of Introduction to Nanoscience by Stuart Lindsay

      Publisher: Oxford University Press
      Publication Date: 10/22/2009 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780199544219, 978-0199544219
      ISBN10: 0199544212

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Nanoscience is not physics, chemistry, engineering or biology. It is all of them, and it is time for a text that integrates the disciplines. This is such a text, aimed at advanced undergraduates and beginning graduate students in the sciences. The consequences of smallness and quantum behaviour are well known and described Richard Feynman''s visionary essay ''There''s Plenty of Room at the Bottom'' (which is reproduced in this book). Another, critical, but thus far neglected, aspect of nanoscience is the complexity of nanostructures. Hundreds, thousands or hundreds of thousands of atoms make up systems that are complex enough to show what is fashionably called ''emergent behaviour''. Quite new phenomena arise from rare configurations of the system. Examples are the Kramer''s theory of reactions (Chapter 3), the Marcus theory of electron transfer (Chapter 8), and enzyme catalysis, molecular motors, and fluctuations in gene expression and splicing, all covered in the final Chapter on Nan

      Trade Review
      The book covers a lot of ground and combines a thoroughness of treatment with a lightness of touch. It is attractive for both undergraduate students seeking clear explanations and graduate students wanting depth. * Stephen Blundell, Oxford University *

      Table of Contents
      PART I: THE BASICS ; PART II: TOOLS ; PART III: APPLICATIONS

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