Produktbild: Handbook of Liquid Crystals
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Handbook of Liquid Crystals 8 Volume Set

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"This second edition is completely restricted and streamlined, with updated as well as completed new topics, 100% more content and a new team of editors and authors. The definitive, single source reference for all those working in the field and the standard for the next decade." ( Materials and Corrosion , 1 October 2014)

"This will really provide you with an encyclopaedia of liquid crystal knowledge which is up to date. Further volumes will be discussed in the future issues of Liquid Crystals Today." ( Liquid Crystals Today , 23 October 2014)

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

12.02.2014

Abbildungen

2502 schwarzweisse Abbildungen

Herausgeber

John W. Goodby + weitere

Verlag

Wiley-VCH

Seitenzahl

5240

Maße (L/B/H)

38/27/24 cm

Gewicht

11150 g

Auflage

2. Auflage

Sprache

Deutsch, Englisch

ISBN

978-3-527-32773-7

Rezension

Portrait

John W. Goodby FRS is Chair of Materials Chemistry at the University of York. Previously he was Supervisor of the Liquid Crystal Materials Group at AT&T Bell Laboratories, USA, for ten years, and Head of the Advanced Materials Group at Hull University for 15. He has received numerous awards from the Royal Society of Chemistry for his research including the Tilden Medal for advances in chemistry, the Interdisciplinary Award for work at the interfaces between chemistry and other disciplines, and the Derek Birchall Medal for creativity and excellence in the applications of materials chemistry in industry. He has been awarded the GW Gray Medal of the British Liquid Crystal Society and was made an Honored Member of the International Liquid Crystal Society. He has over 480 published research papers and holds 56 international patents. In 2011 he was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society.

 

Peter J. Collings is the Morris L. Clothier Professor of Physics at Swarthmore College in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, USA and an Adjunct Professor of Physics at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. He is a Fellow of both the American Physical Society and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Prior permanent and visiting appointments include Kenyon College, Kent State University, the University of Paderborn, the Technical University Berlin, and the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, DC. His research and teaching experience has been recognized by several awards, including the American Physical Society Prize for Research in an Undergraduate Institution and the Alan Berman Research Publication Award of the Naval Research Laboratory.

 

Takashi Kato is presently Full Professor at the University of Tokyo, Japan. He has published about 300 papers including original papers, reviews, and book chapters. His research focuses on supramolecular liquid crystals, stimuli-responsive materials, liquid-crystalline gels and organic/inorganic composites inspired by biomineralization. Takashi Kato received numerous prestigious honors, including the Young Chemists Award of the Chemical Society of Japan, the Wiley Polymer Science Award in Chemistry and the Award of Japanese Liquid Crystal Society.

 

Carsten Tschierske is Professor at the Department of Organic Chemistry of the University of Halle-Wittenberg, Germany. Research in his group is centered around self-organization in liquid crystalline systems. Current efforts include bent-core mesogens, amphiphilic and amphotropic systems, multi-level segregating systems with complex superstructures as well as polar order and supramolecular chirality in soft matter. Carsten Tschierske has held visiting professor positions at the universities of Marburg, Würzburg and Fukuoka.

 

Helen F. Gleeson is Professor of Physics at the University of Manchester, UK, and has held positions including Head of School of Physics and Astronomy and Research Dean in the Faculty of Science and Engineering at Manchester. She has published more than 130 articles and eight patents. Helen has held visiting professor positions at the Universities of Sydney, Case Western Reserve University and Griffith University in Brisbane. Her research interests involve understanding structures in thermotropic liquid crystals studied by novel X-ray scattering and optical techniques, focused particularly on the intermediate smectic phases, blue phases and phases formed from bent-core molecules. She has also used optical traps and tweezers to probe liquid crystalline systems on a mesoscopic scale. Her strong interest in applications involving liquid crystals has led to patents describing novel sensors, optical devices and to the application of graphene in liquid crystal devices. She has been awarded the Cyril Hilsum and G W Gray Medals of the British Liquid Crystal Society and the Holweck Medal and Prize, a bilateral award made by the Institute of Physics and Société Française de Physique. She was awarded the OBE (Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire) in the Queen's birthday honors list in 2009 for Services to Science, recognizing her work on public understanding and encouraging more women into physics.

 

Peter Raynes FRS is Honorary Visiting Professor in the Department of Chemistry at the University of York and Emeritus Professor of Optoelectronic Engineering at the University of Oxford. Previously he had been Deputy Chief Scientific Officer at the Royal Signals and Radar Establishment at Malvern, and Director of Research at the Sharp Laboratories of Europe. He has published more than 130 research papers and authored more than 60 patents in the field of liquid crystals. His research has resulted in two Queen's Awards for Technological Achievement and he has received numerous other awards. These include the Rank Prize for Opto-electronics, the Paterson Medal of the Institute of Physics, the Jan Rajchman Prize of the Society for Information Display, and the G W Gray Medal of the British Liquid Crystal Society.

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

12.02.2014

Abbildungen

2502 schwarzweisse Abbildungen

Herausgeber

Verlag

Wiley-VCH

Seitenzahl

5240

Maße (L/B/H)

38/27/24 cm

Gewicht

11150 g

Auflage

2. Auflage

Sprache

Deutsch, Englisch

ISBN

978-3-527-32773-7

Herstelleradresse

Wiley-VCH GmbH
Boschstrasse 12
69469 Weinheim
DE
product_safety@wiley.com

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  • Produktbild: Handbook of Liquid Crystals
  • VOLUME 1: Fundamentals of Liquid Crystals

     

    PART I - INTRODUCTION

    Introduction and Historical Perspectives of Liquid Crystals

    Classification of Liquid Crystals According to Symmetry

    Phase Transitions: General and Fundamental Aspects, First and Second Order Transitions, Typical Ranges, Monotropic and Enantiotropic Transitions, Supercooling, Thermodynamics

     

    PART II - BASICS OF LIQUID CRYSTALS

    Continuum Theory for Liquid Crystals

    Molecular Theories of Liquid Crystals

    Synthetic Strategies for Liquid Crystals

    Symmetry and Chirality in Liquid Crystals

    Chemical Structure and Mesogenic Properties

     

    PART III - CHARACTERIZATION OF LIQUID CRYSTALS

    Optical Microscopy Studies of Liquid Crystals

    X-ray Scattering Investigations of Liquid Crystals

    Imaging: AFM, STM, TEM, Freeze Fracture Studies, Fluorescence and Confocal Microscopy

    Mixed Systems: Phase Diagrams, Phase Rules, Eutectics, Re-Entrant Phases, Induced Phases, Miscibility Studies

    Magnetic Resonance

    Neutron Scattering

    Light Scattering from Liquid Crystals

    Investigation of Chirality Properties

     

    VOLUME 2: Physical Properties and Phase Behavior of Liquid Crystals

     

    PART I - PHYSICAL PROPERTIES

    Tensor Properties of Anisotropic Materials

    Magnetic Properties of Liquid Crystals

    Optical Properties of Liquid Crystals

    Dielectric Properties of Liquid Crystals

    Elastic Properties of Liquid Crystals

    Defects and Textures of Liquid Crystals

    Viscosity

    Behaviour of Liquid Crystals in Electric and Magnetic fields

    Surface Alignment of Liquid Crystals

    Nonlinear Optical Properties of Liquid Crystals

    Ion Transport in Liquid Crystals

    Phase Transition Theories

     

    PART II - PHASE BEHAVIOR

    Thermal Studies in Liquid Crystals

    Density in Liquid Crystals

    High Pressure Investigations of Liquid Crystals

    Reentrant Phase Transitions in Liquid Crystals

     

    VOLUME 3: Nematic and Chiral Nematic Liquid Crystals

     

    PART I - COMMON FEATURES OF NEMATIC LIQUID CRYSTALS

    Phase Structures of Nematic Liquid Crystals

    Phase Transitions in Liquid Crystals

    Designing Principles and Synthesis of Materials for Nematic Liquid Crystals

     

    PART II - CONVENTIONAL NEMATIC LIQUID CRYSTALS

    Nematic Liquid Crystals for Display Applications

    Elastic Properties of Nematic Liquid Crystals

    Dielectric Properties of Nematic Liquid Crystals

    Diamagnetic Properties of Nematic Liquid Crystals

    Optical Properties of Nematic Liquid Crystals

    Dynamic Properties of Nematic Liquid Crystals

     

    PART III - DISCOTIC, BIAXIAL AND CHIRAL NEMATIC LIQUID CRYSTALS

    Design and Synthesis of Nematic Phases Formed by Disc-Like Molecules

    Synthesis of Biaxial Nematic Liquid Crystals

    Structures and Properties of Biaxial Nematic Liquid Crystals

    Physical Investigations of Biaxial Nematic Liquid Crystals

    Molecular Design and Synthesis of Chiral Nematic Liquid Crystals

    Structures and Optical Properties of Chiral Nematic Liquid Crystals

    Chiral Nematic Liquid Crystals and Electric, Magnetic, and Mechanical Fields

     

    PART IV - BLUE PHASES

    Design of Blue Phase Materials

    Structures of Blue Phases and Other Frustrated Nematic Liquid Crystals

    Polymer and Colloid-Stabilized Blue Phases

     

    VOLUME 4: Smectic and Columnar Liquid Crystals

     

    PART I - NON-CHIRAL SMECTIC LIQUID CRYSTALS

    Design and Synthesis of Smectic Liquid Crystals

    Structures and Properties of Smectic Liquid Crystals

     

    PART II - CHIRAL SMECTIC LIQUID CRYSTALS

    Synthesis of Chiral Smectic Liquid Crystals

    Structures of Chiral Smectic Liquid Crystals

    Ferroelectric Liquid Crystals

    Antiferroelectric Liquid Crystals

    Other Chiral Smectic Liquid Crystal Phases: Alpha, Electroclinic, Intermediate

    High Chirality Mesophases: TGB, SmBlue, Cubic, Tetragonal

     

    PART III - COLUMNAR LIQUID CRYSTALS OF DISC-LIKE MOLECULES

    Design Concepts and Synthesis of Discotic Liquid Crystals

    Structure and Physical Properties of Columnar Liquid Crystals

    Electrical, Magnetic and Mechanical Fields and Discotic Nematic Liquid Crystals

     

    PART IV - BENT-CORE LIQUID CRYSTALS

    Design and Synthesis of Bent-Core Liquid Crystals

    Phase Structures and Physical Properties of Bent-Core Liquid Crystals

    Electrical, Magnetic and Mechanical Fields and Bent-Core Liquid Crystals

    Columnar Liquid Crystal Phases of Bent-Core Mesogens

     

    VOLUME 5: Non-Conventional Liquid Crystals

     

    Microphase Segregation in Conventional Liquid Crystals

    Microphase Segregation in Non-Conventional Liquid Crystals

    Laterally Substituted and Swallow-Tailed Liquid Crystals/Phasmids and Polyatenar Mesogens

    Metal-Containing Liquid Crystals

    Star Mesogens

    Fullero-Liquid Crystals

    Thermotropic Cubic Liquid Crystal Phases, other 3D Phases and Quasi Crystals

    Polyphilic Molecules and Polygonal Cylilnder Phases

    Rod-Coil Molecules

    Hydrogen-Bonded Systems: Discrete Defined Aggregates and Intramolecular H-Bonding, Amides, Carboxylic Acids, Heterocycles

    Liquid Crystal Rotaxanes and Catenanes

     

    VOLUME 6: Nanostructured and Amphiphilic Liquid Crystals

     

    PART I - NANOSTRUCTURED LIQUID CRYSTALS

    Liquid Crystal Physical Gels

    Nanoparticle and Nanostructured Liquid Crystals

    Mineral Liquid Crystals, Particles in Solvents

    Carbon Nanotubes in Liquid Crystals

    Liquid Crystals in Confined Geometries

    Colloid Crystals in Nematic Liquid Crystals

    Virus Particle-Based Liquid Crystals

     

    PART II - AMPHIPHILIC LIQUID CRYSTALS

    Ionic Self Assembly and Amphotropic Ionic Liquid Crystals

    Amphotropic H-Bonding Liquid Crystals

    Lipid Self-Assembly

    Liquid Crystal Crown Ethers and Oligo(ethylene Oxides)

    Lyotropic Surfactant Liquid Crystals, Micellar Systems

    Langmuir and Langmuir-Blodgett Films of Liquid Crystals and Self-Assembled Films of Liquid Crystals on Surface

    Chromonic Liquid Crystals

     

    VOLUME 7: Supermolecular and Polymeric Liquid Crystals

     

    PART I - LIQUID CRYSTALS IN BIOLOGICAL STRUCTURES

    Liquid Crystals in Living Systems and Liquid Crystals in the Development of Life

    Biomembranes

    Cellulosic Liquid Crystals

    Silk and Fibers, Collagens

     

    PART II - DIMESOGENS, OLIGOMESOGENS AND DENDRIMERS

    Liquid Crystal Dimers and Oligomers

    Supermolecular Liquid Crystals

    Liquid Crystal Dendrimers and Hyperbranched Liquid Crystals

     

    Part III - Main-Chain and Side-Group Thermotropic Liquid-Crystalline Polymers

    Aromatic Main Chain Liquid Crystalline Polymers

    Main-Chain and Side-Chain LC Polymers with Disc-Like Segments

    Liquid Crystal Polysilanes

    Design and Synthesis of Side Chain Liquid Crystal Polymers

    Structure and Properties of Side Group Thermotropic Liquid Crystal Polymers

    Side-On Type Side-Chain and Main-Chain/Side-Chain Combined Liquid Crystalline Polymers

     

    PART IV - BLOCK COPOLYMERS AND POLYMER NETWORKS

    Polymer Networks

    Liquid Crystalline Elastomers

    Block Copolymers Containing Liquid Crystalline Segments

     

    VOLUME 8: Applications of Liquid Crystals

     

    PART I - DISPLAY DEVICES

    TN, STN and Guest-Host Liquid Crystal Display Devices

    In-Plane Switching Display Devices

    Vertically Aligned Nematic Display Devices

    Bistable Nematic Display Devices

    Chiral Nematic Liquid Crystal Displays

    SmecticA Liquid Crystal Displays

    Ferroelectric Liquid Crystal Displays

    Ferroelectric Liquid Crystal Hosts for Displays

    Antiferroic Liquid Crystals

    Blue Phase and Isotropic Displays

     

    PART II - NON-DISPLAY APPLICATIONS AND FUNCTIONS

    Applications of Liquid Crystals in Telecommunication

    Adaptive Optics and Lenses

    Photonic Micro- and Nanostructures, Metamaterials

    Lasing

    Nonlinear Optics

    Holography and Information Storage

    Thermography and Stress Imaging Using Liquid Crystals

    Photoresponsive, Photosensitive and Photoalignable Materials

    Liquid Crystal Dyes

    Liquid Crystal Semiconductors

    Liquid Crystal Semiconductors: Oligothiophenes and Related Materials

    Redox-Active (Electrochromic) Liquid Crystals

    Liquid Crystals as Ion Conductors

    Electromechanical Effects

    Optomechanical Devices

    Applications of Bent-Core Mesogens

    Applications of Mineral Liquid Crystals

    Magnetic Liquid Crystals, Liquid Crystal Radicals and Carbenes

    Molecular Machines

    Liquid Crystals in Biological Imaging and Biomechanical Devices

    Sensing Biomolecules using Liquid Crystals