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This book gathers original contributions from a selected group of
distinguished researchers that are actively working in the theory
and practical applications of solvent effects and chemical
reactions. The importance of getting a good understanding of
surrounding media effects on chemical reacting system is difficult
to overestimate. Applications go from condensed phase chemistry,
biochemical reactions in vitro to biological systems in vivo.
Catalysis is a phenomenon produced by a particular system
interacting with the reacting subsystem. The result may be an
increment of the chemical rate or sometimes a decreased one. At the
bottom, catalytic sources can be characterized as a special kind of
surrounding medium effect. The materials involving in catalysis may
range from inorganic components as in zeolites, homogenous
components, enzymes, catalytic antibodies, and ceramic materials. .
With the enormous progress achieved by computing technology, an
increasing number of models and phenomenological approaches are
being used to describe the effects of a given surrounding medium on
the electronic properties of selected subsystem. A number of
quantum chemical methods and programs, currently applied to
calculate in vacuum systems, have been supplemented with a variety
of model representations. With the increasing number of
methodologies applied to this important field, it is becoming more
and more difficult for non-specialist to cope with theoretical
developments and extended applications. For this and other reasons,
it is was deemed timely to produce a book where methodology and
applications were analyzed and reviewed by leading experts in the
field.
People who attended the NATO Advanced Study Institute (ASI)
entitled NEW THEORETICAL CONCEPTS FOR UNDERSTANDING ORGANIC REAC
TIONS held at Sant Feliu de Gufxols on the Costa Brava of Spain had
a unique experience. They have seen the evolution of the field from
qualitative arguments through the generation of Potential Energy
Surfaces (PES) to the use of PES in molecular dynamics. The
excellent lectures that were dedicated to the various aspects of
Potential Energy Surfaces clearly revealed a colossal amount of ma
terial that represents our current understanding of the overall
problem. It is our hope that the present volume will recreate the
excitement in the readers that we all experienced during the
meeting in Spain. One can say, without too much exaggeration, that
chemistry has become and exercise on potential energy surfaces
(PES). Structural (position of the energy minima), spectroscopic
(vicinity around the minima), and reactivity (reaction path along
the surface) properties may be determined from the analysis of PES.
New theoretical tools, together with recent developments in
computer technology and programming, have allowed to obtain a
better knowledge of these surfaces, and to extract further chemical
information from them, so new horizons have been added to
Theoretical Organic Chemistry."
Although biotechnology emerged from the genetic engineering
revolution of the '70s, the knowledge of the structure of genes
revealed its molecular aspects. Molecular biotechnology is a
multidisciplinary domain of research in which experiments,
simulations, and theories interact. At present, the huge increase
in computer power allows us to carry out numerical simulations of
biochemical systems. However, a fundamental question appears
concerning the sophistication of the model utilized to capture the
main features of biomolecules and biochemical processes. In the
present book a group of leading specialists in molecular
biotechnology provides an answer to this question. This book is
thus an excellent tool for those researchers wishing to know the
state-of-the-art in this domain. The book spans the range from
molecular conformations through protein folding, and from chemical
reactivity through enzymatic action. Furthermore, it formulates
recommendations for future research in molecular biotechnology.
People who attended the NATO Advanced Study Institute (ASI)
entitled NEW THEORETICAL CONCEPTS FOR UNDERSTANDING ORGANIC REAC
TIONS held at Sant Feliu de Gufxols on the Costa Brava of Spain had
a unique experience. They have seen the evolution of the field from
qualitative arguments through the generation of Potential Energy
Surfaces (PES) to the use of PES in molecular dynamics. The
excellent lectures that were dedicated to the various aspects of
Potential Energy Surfaces clearly revealed a colossal amount of ma
terial that represents our current understanding of the overall
problem. It is our hope that the present volume will recreate the
excitement in the readers that we all experienced during the
meeting in Spain. One can say, without too much exaggeration, that
chemistry has become and exercise on potential energy surfaces
(PES). Structural (position of the energy minima), spectroscopic
(vicinity around the minima), and reactivity (reaction path along
the surface) properties may be determined from the analysis of PES.
New theoretical tools, together with recent developments in
computer technology and programming, have allowed to obtain a
better knowledge of these surfaces, and to extract further chemical
information from them, so new horizons have been added to
Theoretical Organic Chemistry."
This book gathers original contributions from a selected group of
distinguished researchers that are actively working in the theory
and practical applications of solvent effects and chemical
reactions. The importance of getting a good understanding of
surrounding media effects on chemical reacting system is difficult
to overestimate. Applications go from condensed phase chemistry,
biochemical reactions in vitro to biological systems in vivo.
Catalysis is a phenomenon produced by a particular system
interacting with the reacting subsystem. The result may be an
increment of the chemical rate or sometimes a decreased one. At the
bottom, catalytic sources can be characterized as a special kind of
surrounding medium effect. The materials involving in catalysis may
range from inorganic components as in zeolites, homogenous
components, enzymes, catalytic antibodies, and ceramic materials. .
With the enormous progress achieved by computing technology, an
increasing number of models and phenomenological approaches are
being used to describe the effects of a given surrounding medium on
the electronic properties of selected subsystem. A number of
quantum chemical methods and programs, currently applied to
calculate in vacuum systems, have been supplemented with a variety
of model representations. With the increasing number of
methodologies applied to this important field, it is becoming more
and more difficult for non-specialist to cope with theoretical
developments and extended applications. For this and other reasons,
it is was deemed timely to produce a book where methodology and
applications were analyzed and reviewed by leading experts in the
field.
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