The Oxford handbook of nanoscience and technology, vol.1. Basic aspects (2010)
The Oxford handbook of nanoscience and technology, vol.1. Basic aspects [texte imprimé] / Anant V. Narlikar, Éditeur scientifique ; Yunyi Y. Fu, Éditeur scientifique . - Oxford : Oxford university press, 2010 . - XIX, 898 p. : ill. ; 26 cm.
ISBN : 978-0-19-953304-6
Notes bibliogr. - Index
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Mots-clés : Nanotechnologie -- Guides pratiques et mémentos
Nanotechnology -- Handbooks, manuals, etc
Nanoscience -- Handbooks, manuals, etcIndex. décimale : 620.3 Nanotechnologie Résumé : This is an agenda-setting and high-profile book that presents an authoritative and cutting-edge analysis of nanoscience and technology. The Oxford Handbook of Nanoscience and Technology provides a comprehensive and accessible overview of the major achievements in different aspects of this field. The Handbook comprises 3 volumes, structured thematically, with 25 chapters each. Volume I presents fundamental issues of basic physics, chemistry, biochemistry, tribology etc. of nanomaterials. Volume II focuses on the progress made with host of nanomaterials including DNA and protein based nanostructures. Volume III highlights engineering and related developments, with a focus on frontal application areas. All chapters are written by noted international experts in the field. The book should be useful for final year undergraduates specializing in the field. It should prove indispensable to graduate students, and serious researchers from academic and industrial sectors working in the field of Nanoscience and Technology from different disciplines including Physics, Chemistry, Biochemistry, Biotechnology, Medicine, Materials Science, Metallurgy, Ceramics, Information Technology as well as Electrical, Electronic and Computational Engineering. Note de contenu : In summary :
1. Nanoelectronic: A unified view.
2. Electronic and transport properties of doped silicon nanowires.
3. NEGF-bases models for dephasing in quantum transport.
4. Molecular nanowires and their properties as electrical conductors.
5. Quasi-ballistic electron transport in atomic wires.
6. Thermal transport of small systems.
