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Molecular Gels: Materials with Self-Assembled Fibrillar Networks
 
 
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Molecular Gels: Materials with Self-Assembled Fibrillar Networks [Hardcover]

Richard G. Weiss (Editor), Pierre Terech (Editor)

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Book Description

1402033524 978-1402033520 December 22, 2005 1
"Molecular Gels: Materials with Self-Assembled Fibrillar Networks" is a comprehensive treatise on gelators, especially low molecular-mass gelators and the properties of their gels. The structures and modes of formation of the self-assembled fibrillar networks (SAFINs) that immobilize the liquid components of the gels are discussed experimentally and theoretically. The spectroscopic, rheological, and structural features of the different classes of low molecular-mass gelators are also presented. Many examples of the application of the principal analytical techniques for investigation of molecular gels (including SANS, SAXS, WAXS, UV-vis absorption, fluorescence and CD spectroscopies, scanning electron, transmission electron and optical microscopies, and molecular modeling) are presented didactically and in-depth, as are several of the theories of the stages of aggregation of individual low molecular-mass gelator molecules leading to SAFINs. Several actual and potential applications of molecular gels in disparate fields (from silicate replication of nanostructures to art conservation) are described. Special emphasis is placed on perspectives for future developments. This book is an invaluable resource for researchers and practitioners either already researching self-assembly and soft matter or new to the area. Those who will find the book useful include chemists, engineers, spectroscopists, physicists, biologists, theoreticians, and materials scientists.

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From the Back Cover

Molecular gels and fibrillar networks – a comprehensive guide to experiment and theory Molecular Gels: Materials with Self-Assembled Fibrillar Networks provides a comprehensive treatise on gelators, especially low molecular-mass gelators (LMOGs), and the properties of their gels. The structures and modes of formation of the self-assembled fibrillar networks (SAFINs) that immobilize the liquid components of the gels are discussed experimentally and theoretically. The spectroscopic, rheological, and structural features of the different classes of LMOGs are also presented. Many examples of the application of the principal analytical techniques for investigation of molecular gels (including SANS, SAXS, WAXS, UV-vis absorption, fluorescence and CD spectroscopies, scanning electron, transmission electron and optical microscopies, and molecular modeling) are presented didactically and in-depth, as are several of the theories of the stages of aggregation of individual LMOG molecules leading to SAFINs. Several actual and potential applications of molecular gels in disparate fields (from silicate replication of nanostructures to art conservation) are described. Special emphasis is placed on perspectives for future developments. This book is an invaluable resource for researchers and practitioners either already researching self-assembly and soft matter or new to the area. Those who will find the book useful include chemists, engineers, spectroscopists, physicists, biologists, theoreticians, and materials scientists. Richard G. Weiss is Professor of Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USA. Pierre Terech is Research Director, CNRS – Atomic Energy Center – Grenoble University, Grenoble, France.

About the Author

Richard G. Weiss is Professor of Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USA. Pierre Terech is Research Director, CNRS – Atomic Energy Center – Grenoble University, Grenoble, France.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
postgel regime, organic gelators, gemini molecules, molecular gels, critical cluster formation, gelate water, amphiphilic gelators, gelator molecules, banding transition, gelator concentration, pregel regime, gelation efficiency, gelator aggregates, handing transition, wormlike micellar solutions, bilayer ribbons, electrically induced light scattering, wormlike micelles, helical silica fibers, helical bonds, chiral ribbons, tubular silica, soft glassy materials, cyclohexane gel, micellar fibers
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
American Chemical Society, Royal Society of Chemistry, Perkin Trans, Academic Press, John Wiley, Marcel Dekker, Tetrahedron Lett, Plenum Press, Symposium Series, The Chemical Society of Japan, The Society of Rheology, Oxford University Press, Colloid Interface Sci, National Academy of Sciences, The American Physical Society, Clarendon Press, Del Guer, Reduced Wave Number, Weiss Figure, Boca Raton, Faraday Trans, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Nano Lett, San Diego, Cornell University Press
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