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This series of books, which is published at the rate of about one
per year, addresses fundamental problems in materials science. The
contents cover a broad range of topics from small clusters of atoms
to engineering materials and involve chemistry, physics, materials
science, and engineering, with length scales ranging from Angstroms
up to millimeters. The emphasis is on basic science rather than on
applications. Each book focuses on a single area of current
interest and brings together leading experts to give an up-to-date
discussion of their work and the work of others. Each article
contains enough references that the interested reader can access
the relevant literature. Thanks are given to the Center for
Fundamental Materials Research at Michigan State University for
supporting this series. M. F. Thorpe, Series Editor E-mail:
thorpe@pa. msu. edu East Lansing, Michigan V PREFACE It is hard to
believe that not quite ten years ago, namely in 1991, nanotubes of
carbon were discovered by Sumio Iijima in deposits on the
electrodes of the same carbon arc apparatus that was used to
produce fullerenes such as the "buckyball." Nanotubes of carbon or
other materials, consisting ofhollow cylinders that are only a few
nanometers in diameter, yet up to millimeters long, are amazing
structures that self-assemble under extreme conditions. Their
quasi-one-dimensional character and virtual absence of atomic
defects give rise to a plethora of unusual phenomena."
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