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The world-wide sales of polysiloxanes or silicones at the beginning
of this new millennium is approximately $10 billion per year.
Commercial products range from those entirely composed of silicone
to products where the silicone is a low level but key component.
This symposium covered the recent academic and technological
developments behind silicones and silicone-modified materials and
the sessions were well attended of wide interest to both the
academic and industrial communities. The papers from our two highly
successful symposia in this important area were published in the
books Silicones and Silicone-Modified Materials, (Eds. S. J.
Clarson, J. J. Fitzgerald, M. J. Owen and S. D. Smith), ACS
Symposium Series Vol. 729 / Oxford University Press, 2000, ISBN
0-8412-3613-5 and Synthesis and Properties of Silicones and
Silicone-Modified Materials, (Eds. S. J. Clarson, J. J. Fitzgerald,
M. J. Owen, S. D. Smith and M. E. Van Dyke), ACS Symposium Series
Vol 838 / Oxford University Press, 2003, ISBN 0-8412-3804-9
Produced under the auspices of the "Section on the Sociology of
Children and Youth of the American Sociological Association", this
volume provides a cohesive, wide-ranging source of information on
the life courses of children and youths. Contributions reflect:
demographic analyses and projections; dualitative aspects of
children's lives; children and youth in historical and
cross-cultural perspective; issues of development in social
context; children and public policy; and social and psychological
dynamics of childhood and adolescence.
This volume is subtitled "New Frontiers in Socialization". With a
combination of invited and author initiated papers - all
anonymously peer reviewed - this volume seeks to produce a cohesive
source of information on socialization and the life course. It
advances theory and research related to socialization during
specific periods of adult life or across adulthood. We focus on the
adult years because most scholarship on socialization pertains to
the first two decades of life. The book addresses socialization
experiences within one or more contemporary contexts - families,
neighbourhoods and communities, peer and friendship groups,
educational settings, work organizations, volunteer associations,
medical institutions, the media, and nation and culture. It also
discusses the processes that occur in these settings, the primary
agents of socialization, the content of socialization messages, and
the consequences of these experiences for individuals and society
at large.
"Silicone Surface Science" offers a survey of the major topics
concerning the properties and behavior of silicone surfaces. It
covers all main aspects of the subject, including:
polydimethylsiloxane, spread monolayers, self-assembled monolayers,
hydrophobicity and super-hydrophobicity, coupling agents,
surfactants, fluorosilicones, surface treatments and surface
analysis.
This book brings together the field's leading experts who
investigated both fundamental and applied aspects of silicone
surface science and technology, and introduces the reader to the
origins and historical development of silicone surfaces as well as
to their most significant current key features.
"Silicone Surface Science" is an invaluable guide and
indispensable reference source for all those interested in this
important area of polymer and materials science and technology,
from graduate students to experienced scientists alike."
During the last two decades silicon-containing dendritic
polymers have become one of the fastest growing areas of
development in polymer science. The eruption of interest in these
new polymers stems from their unprecedented molecular architecture,
unique resulting properties and the realization that they represent
ideal building blocks for chemical nanotechnology.
This is the first book to solely focus on silicon-containing
dendritic polymers. The contributions of those experts who
originally introduced each field or played a major role in its
progress are reported. The developments in all major areas of this
field are presented from their origins to the present. It is
anticipated that this text will become an invaluable guide and
vanguard of reference for experienced scientists interested in the
fields of polymer and material science, synthetic chemistry, and
nanotechnology. It will also serve advanced graduate students
either as a source of creative inspiration or as a textbook for
appropriate courses.
Children born during the post-WWII era of peace and prosperity
entered history at a time dominated by I-Like-Ike politics and
domestic security. As they approached adolescence, however, their
world was shaken by major cultural, economic, social, and political
upheaval. And although it was time of great innovation and
progress, a sense of chaos and bitterness began to envelop the
country. It was the a ~60s. For many Americans, a mere mention of
this decade evokes an extraordinary time and place in the countrya
(TM)s - and their own - history.
Adolescents who had been enjoying the technological and medical
advances of the era - television, drive-in movies, rock-and-roll,
vaccinations that prevented once-incurable diseases - now were also
experiencing the fallout from the Civil Rights Movement, domestic
terrorism, stagflation, and (perhaps most significant) the Vietnam
War.
From Adolescence to Adulthood in the Vietnam Era provides a
unique, detailed, long-term study of the psychological and social
worlds of male adolescents who were on the cusp of adulthood as the
1960s were ending. This longitudinal analysis follows adolescent
boys who graduated with the class of 1969 and transitioned into
adulthood either through military service, full-time employment, or
college life. The results examine the different pathways these boys
chose and the affect these choices had on their transition from
adolescents to young adult men.
It has been predicted that nearly half of all human proteins are
glycosylated indicating the significance of glycoproteins in human
health and disease. For example, the glycans attached to proteins
have emerged as important biomarkers in the diagnosis of diseases
such as cancers and play a significant role in how pathogenic
viruses gain entry into human cells. The study of glycoproteins has
now become a truly proteomic science. In the last few years,
technology developments including in silico methods, high
throughput separation and detection techniques have accelerated the
characterization of glycoproteins in cells and tissues.
Glyco-engineering coupled to rapid recombinant protein production
has facilitated the determination of glycoprotein structures key to
exploring and exploiting their functional roles. Each chapter in
this volume is written by experts in the field and together provide
a review of the state of the art in the emerging field of
glycoproteomics.
This volume represents a new name and a new focus for its
predecessor, "Current Perspectives on Aging and the Life Cycle"
(volumes 1-4). We begin our new series, now titled "Advances in
Life Course Research," with volume 5. Its statement of purpose is
"the publication of theoretical analyses, reviews, policy analyses
and positions, and theory-based empirical papers on issues
involving all aspects of the human life course." It adopts a broad
conception of the life course, and invites and welcomes
contributions from all disciplines and fields of study interested
in understanding, describing, and predicting the antecedents of and
consequences for the course that human lives take from birth to
death, within and across time and cultures (construed in its
broadest sense), regardless of methodology, theoretical
orientation, or disciplinary affiliation.
This updated and expanded volume reflects the current state of the
structural protein field with improved and refined protocols that
have been applied to particularly challenging proteins, notably
integral membrane proteins and multi-protein complexes. Structural
Proteomics: High-Throughput Methods, Second Edition begins by
exploring the resources available for curation, annotation, and
structure prediction in silico, and continues with methods for
sample preparation of both proteins and crystals, as well as
structural characterization techniques. Written for the highly
successful Methods in Molecular Biology series, chapters include
introductions to their respective topics, lists of the necessary
materials and reagents, step-by-step, readily reproducible
laboratory protocols, and tips on troubleshooting and avoiding
known pitfalls. Practical and up-to-date, Structural Proteomics:
High-Throughput Methods, Second Edition will aid researchers in
expanding our knowledge of this vital and expansive area of protein
science.
In The New Superconductors, Frank J. Owens and Charles P. Poole,
Jr., offer a descriptive, non-mathematical presentation of the
latest superconductors and their properties for the non-specialist.
Highlights of this up-to-date text include chapters on
superfluidity, the latest copper oxide types, fullerenes, and
prospects for future research. The book also features many examples
of commercial applications; an extensive glossary that defines
superconductivity terms in clear language; and a supplementary list
of readings for the interested lay reader.
Two thousand years ago the Roman architect Marcus Vitruvius Pollio
wrote the ten books on architecture establishing the concept of the
pattern book offering design principles and solutions that is still
referred to in every architect's education. A Green Vitruvius is
intended as a green pattern book for today. Now fully updated, this
well established textbook provides advice suitable for
undergraduate and post graduate students on the integration of
sustainable practice into the design and construction process, the
issues to be considered, the strategies to be adopted, the elements
of green design and design evaluation within the process. Classic
design elegance is found in the holistic clear solution.
In 1987 a major breakthrough occurred in materials science. A new
family of materials was discovered that became superconducting
above the temperature at which nitrogen gas liquifies, namely, 77 K
or -196 DegreesC. Within months of the discovery, a wide variety of
experimental techniques were brought to bear in order to measure
the properties of these materials and to gain an understanding of
why they superconduct at such high temperatures. Among the
techniques used were electromagnetic absorption in both the normal
and the superconducting states. The measurements enabled the
determination of a wide variety of properties, and in some
instances led to the observation of new effects not seen by other
measu- ments, such as the existence of weak-link microwave
absorption at low dc magnetic fields. The number of different
properties and the degree of detail that can be obtained from
magnetic field- and temperature-dependent studies of
electromagnetic abso- tion are not widely appreciated. For example,
these measurements can provide information on the band gap,
critical fields, the H-T irreversibility line, the amount of
trapped flux, and even information about the symmetry of the wave
function of the Cooper pairs. It is possible to use low dc magnetic
field-induced absorption of microwaves with derivative detection to
verify the presence of superconductivity in a matter of minutes,
and the measurements are often more straightforward than others.
For example, they do not require the physical contact with the
sample that is necessary when using four-probe resistivity to
detect superconductivity.
This volume is presented in four sections based on recent
research in the field: the sources of identity, the tie between
identity and the social structure, the non-cognitive outcomes -
such as emotional - of identity processes, and the idea that
individuals have multiple identities. This timely work will be of
interest to social psychologists in sociology and psychology,
behavioral scientists, and political scientists.
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Urban Impact (Hardcover)
John L. Thompson; Edited by Dena J. Owens; Foreword by Paige Patterson
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This work covers new ground by presenting a systematic,
comparative macro-analysis of the historical experiences of
thirteen race and ethnic groups, with emphasis on their economic
and political ties to government. It starts with the colonial
period (Anglo-Saxons, French, and Scots-Irish) and extends to 1970,
which can be considered the date at which civil rights legislation
began to have a significant effect.
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