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Following the first two volumes "Dendrimers" (TCC vol. 197) and
"Dendrimers II" (TCC vol. 210), the third volume dealing with this
topic is now appearing in print (the "tetralogy" on dendrimers will
soon be completed with the fourth volume). The present volume
comprises a collection of up-to-date reviews written by renowned
pioneers of research in the dendrimer field, three of whom lectured
at the 1. International Dendrimer Symposium (IDS-1 1999) in
Frankfurt. A focus of this volume is the variety of material
properties of soft and shape-persistent dendrimers. As its
predecessors did, this volume breaks through the frontiers to
neighboring disciplines and, in an interdisciplinary approach,
addresses topics such as polydisperse, hyperbranched macromolecules
(dendritic polymers), the analysis of shape and density by
small-angle scattering techniques, finely dispersed metals
(dendrimers as catalysts), and nanotechnology close to potential
applications.
This series presents critical reviews of the present and future
trends in polymer and biopolymer science including chemistry,
physical chemistry, physics and materials science. It is addressed
to all scientists at universities and in industry who wish to keep
abreast of advances in the topics covered.
Impact Factor Ranking: Always number one in Polymer Science.
More information as well as the electronic version of the whole
content available at: www.springerlink.com
Have newcomers to American cities been responsible for a
disproportionate amount of violent crime? "Dangerous Strangers"
takes up this question by examining the incidence of criminal
violence among several waves of immigrant/ethnic groups in San
Francisco over 150 years. By looking at a variety of groups--Irish,
German, Italian, and Chinese immigrants, primarily--and their
different experiences at varying times in the city's history, this
study addresses the issue of how much violence can be attributed to
new groups' treatment by the host society and how much can be
traced to traits found in their community of origin. "Dangerous
Strangers" fills an acknowledged gap in the literature of homicide
studies and broadens our understanding of newcomer violence.
Following the first two volumes "Dendrimers" (TCC vol. 197) and
"Dendrimers II" (TCC vol. 210), the third volume dealing with this
topic is now appearing in print (the "tetralogy" on dendrimers will
soon be completed with the fourth volume). The present volume
comprises a collection of up-to-date reviews written by renowned
pioneers of research in the dendrimer field, three of whom lectured
at the 1. International Dendrimer Symposium (IDS-1 1999) in
Frankfurt. A focus of this volume is the variety of material
properties of soft and shape-persistent dendrimers. As its
predecessors did, this volume breaks through the frontiers to
neighboring disciplines and, in an interdisciplinary approach,
addresses topics such as polydisperse, hyperbranched macromolecules
(dendritic polymers), the analysis of shape and density by
small-angle scattering techniques, finely dispersed metals
(dendrimers as catalysts), and nanotechnology close to potential
applications.
This series presents critical reviews of the present and future
trends in polymer and biopolymer science including chemistry,
physical chemistry, physics and materials science. It is addressed
to all scientists at universities and in industry who wish to keep
abreast of advances in the topics covered.
Impact Factor Ranking: Always number one in Polymer Science.
More information as well as the electronic version of the whole
content available at: www.springerlink.com
This high-class book reflects a decade of intense research,
culminating in excellent successes over the last few years. The
contributions from both academia as well as the industry leaders
combine the fundamentals and latest research results with
application know-how and examples of functioning displays.
As a result, all the four important aspects of OLEDs are covered:
- syntheses of the organic materials
- physical theory of electroluminescence and device
efficiency
- device conception and construction
- characterization of both materials and devices.
The whole is naturally rounded off with a look at what the future
holds in store.
The editor, Klaus Muellen, is director of the highly prestigious
MPI for polymer research in Mainz, Germany, while the authors
include Nobel Laureate Alan Heeger, one of the most notable
founders of the field, Richard Friend, as well as Ching Tang,
Eastman Kodak's number-one OLED researcher, known throughout the
entire community for his key publications.
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