Interfacial Science: An Introduction - Geoffrey Barnes, Ian Gentle

Interfacial Science: An Introduction

Buch | Softcover
352 Seiten
2011 | 2nd Revised edition
Oxford University Press (Verlag)
978-0-19-957118-5 (ISBN)
65,95 inkl. MwSt
Interfacial science impacts on our lives in diverse and surprising ways. Without it, we would face bubble bath without the bubbles, detergents which don't clean, cappuccinos without the froth. It has also fuelled some of the most ground-breaking and thought-provoking advances in research in recent times, from biosciences to nanotechnology. Introduction to Interfacial Science offers an engaging insight into the study of the physical and chemical properties of interfaces, how they behave, why they behave as they do, and how this behaviour can be harnessed and exploited in novel and exciting ways.

Interfacial Science: An Introduction is an accessible text introducing readers to the chemistry of interfaces, a subject of increasing relevance and popularity due to the emergence of nanoscience.

Opening with an overview of the key principles of capilliarity and adsorption, the book goes on to explore liquid/gas, solid/gas, and liquid/liquid interfaces, before examining biological interfaces, one of the most stimulating areas of current research. With the careful explanation of essential mathematical and physical concepts, and description of real world applications of the material presented, the book helps the student to build confidence in, and see the relevance of, the topics covered.

Striking a careful balance between the highly mathematical treatments of the subject by more specialist texts, and the rudimentary treatment offered by general physical chemistry texts, Interfacial Science: An Introduction offers a breadth and depth of treatment which is perfect for any advanced undergraduate course on this exciting, dynamic subject.


Online Resource Centre
The Online Resource Centre to accompany Interfacial Science: An Introduction features the following resources for registered adopters of the text:
- Downloadable figures
- Solutions manual, containing worked solutions to the exercises appearing in the textbook
- Protocols for around five laboratory experiments, appearing as MS Word documents, for lecturers to modify to suit their own particular setups

After completing a Ph.D. at the University of New South Wales, Dr Geoff Barnes spent two years at Columbia University in New York and then two more years at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zürich. He returned to Australia in 1962 to take up a position as Lecturer in Physical Chemistry at The University of Queensland and retired as Reader in 1994. For most of this period he worked in Surface Chemistry with a special interest in insoluble monolayers. Since retirement he has worked with Ian Gentle on various research projects and more recently in the writing of Interfacial Science: An Introduction. Ian Gentle received a Ph.D. from the University of Sydney in 1988 and, after postdoctoral positions at the University of New England and the Australian National University, was appointed as Lecturer in Chemistry at the University of Queensland in 1993. He was promoted to Professor in 2009. Since then he and his group have published widely in various aspects of science related to interfaces. Throughout his career he has had a strong interest in the application of synchrotron and neutron radiation to interfacial science and since late 2008 has held the position of Head of Science at the Australian Synchrotron, while maintaining his research group at the University of Queensland.

1. Introduction ; 2. Capillarity and the mechanics of surfaces ; 3. Adsorption and the thermodynamics of surfaces ; 4. The gas-liquid interface: adsorption, films and foams, aerosols ; 5. Insoluble monolayers and Langmuir-Blodgett films ; 6. The liquid-liquid interface: emulsions; membranes ; 7. The surfaces of solids ; 8. The gas-solid interface: adsorption; catalysis ; 9. The liquid-solid interface: adsorption; colloids ; 10. Biological interfaces

Zusatzinfo 166 illustrations
Verlagsort Oxford
Sprache englisch
Maße 184 x 244 mm
Gewicht 772 g
Themenwelt Naturwissenschaften Chemie Organische Chemie
Naturwissenschaften Chemie Physikalische Chemie
ISBN-10 0-19-957118-X / 019957118X
ISBN-13 978-0-19-957118-5 / 9780199571185
Zustand Neuware
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