Ultrafast Optical and Vibrational Studies of Some Simple Chemical Reactions in Solutions

Author(s):  
N. Pugliano ◽  
D. Raftery ◽  
E. Gooding ◽  
A. Szarka ◽  
R. M. Hochstrasser
Author(s):  
Peter Atkins

Illustrated with remarkable new full-color images--indeed, one or more on every page--and written by one of the world's leading authorities on the subject, Reactions offers a compact, pain-free tour of the inner workings of chemistry. Reactions begins with the chemical formula almost everyone knows--the formula for water, H2O--a molecule with an "almost laughably simple chemical composition." But Atkins shows that water is also rather miraculous--it is the only substance whose solid form is less dense than its liquid (hence ice floats in water)--and incredibly central to many chemical reactions, as it is an excellent solvent, being able to dissolve gases and many solids. Moreover, Atkins tells us that water is actually chemically aggressive, and can react with and destroy the compounds dissolved in it, and he shows us what happens at the molecular level when water turns to ice--and when it melts. Moving beyond water, Atkins slowly builds up a toolkit of basic chemical processes, including precipitation (perhaps the simplest of all chemical reactions), combustion, reduction, corrosion, electrolysis, and catalysis. He then shows how these fundamental tools can be brought together in more complex processes such as photosynthesis, radical polymerization, vision, enzyme control, and synthesis. Peter Atkins is the world-renowned author of numerous best-selling chemistry textbooks for students. In this crystal-clear, attractively illustrated, and insightful volume, he provides a fantastic introductory tour--in just a few hundred colorful and lively pages - for anyone with a passing or serious interest in chemistry.


1980 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. N. Israelachvili ◽  
S. Marčelja ◽  
R. G. Horn

Membranes are the most common cellular structures in both plants and animals. They are now recognized as being involved in almost all aspects of cellular activity ranging from motility and food entrapment in simple unicellular organisms, to energy transduction, immunorecognition, nerve conduction and biosynthesis in plants and higher organisms. This functional diversity is reflected in the wide variety of lipids and particularly of proteins that compose different membranes. An understanding of the physical principles that govern the molecular organization of membranes is essential for an understanding of their physiological roles since structure and function are much more interdependent in membranes than in, say, simple chemical reactions in solution. We must recognize, however, that the word ‘understanding’ means different things in different disciplines, and nowhere is this more apparent than in this multidisciplinary area where biology, chemistry and physics meet.


2019 ◽  
Vol 94 (4) ◽  
pp. 045002 ◽  
Author(s):  
A R Karimov ◽  
M A Taleisnik ◽  
T V Savenkova ◽  
L M Aksenova

2012 ◽  
Vol 21 (9) ◽  
pp. 1388-1395 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yakov Kipnis ◽  
David Baker

2015 ◽  
Vol 25 (01) ◽  
pp. 1540003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ben De Lacy Costello

This paper overviews work on the use of simple chemical reactions to calculate Voronoi diagrams and undertake other related geometric calculations. This work highlights that this type of specialised chemical processor is a model example of a parallel processor. For example increasing the complexity of the input data within a given area does not increase the computation time. These processors are also able to calculate two or more Voronoi diagrams in parallel. Due to the specific chemical reactions involved and the relative strength of reaction with the substrate (and cross-reactivity with the products) these processors are also capable of calculating Voronoi diagrams sequentially from distinct chemical inputs. The chemical processors are capable of calculating a range of generalised Voronoi diagrams (either from circular drops of chemical or other geometric shapes made from adsorbent substrates soaked in reagent) , skeletonisation of planar shapes and weighted Voronoi diagrams (e.g., additively weighted Voronoi diagrams, Multiplicitavely weighted Crystal growth Voronoi diagrams). The paper will also discuss some limitations of these processors. These chemical processors constitute a class of pattern forming reactions which have parallels with those observed in natural systems. It is possible that specialised chemical processors of this general type could be useful for synthesising functional structured materials.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document