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This book reflects understanding of property enhancement through
development of molecular structure. It focuses on liquid
crystalline and semicrystalline polymers that provide a state of
the art knowledge of the molecular organizations.
The research reported in the third volume of Analytical Calorimetry
covers a wide variety of topics. The variety indicates the
sophistication which thermal analysis is reaching and addition ally
the ever widening applications that are being developed, Advances
in instrumentation include: microcalorimeter design, development
and refinement of titration calorimetry, definition of further
theory of scanning calorimetry, studies of the temperature of
resolution of thermistors, and a refinement of the effluent gas
analysis technique and its application to agricultural chemicals as
well as organic materials. A wide variety of applications is
reported. These cover the fields of polymeric materials, dental
materials, inorganic proteins, biochemical materials, gels, mixed
crystals, and other specialized areas. Contributions also include
applications of important related techniques such as
thermomechanical and thermogravimetric analysis. The contributions
to this Volume represent papers presented before the Division of
Analytical Chemistry at the Third Symposium on Analytical Chemistry
held at the 167th National Meeting of the American Chemical
Society, March 30 - April 5, 1974.
This volume represents a collection of selected papers from a
symposium of the Division of Colloid and Surface Chemistry held in
Chicago during the national meeting of the American Chemical
Society, August, 1973. The response was remarkable to this "By
Invitation" symposium on Ordered Fluids and Liquid Crystals. The
size alone expresses the growth of the field. The number of
contributions assembled here, for example, is approximately twice
that at each of the two previous American Chemical Society symposia
on this subject. Contributions from eleven countries were presented
and this volume contains more than this number of papers from
abroad. The increased attention to liquid crystals has brought some
interesting trends in the kinds of systems, the experimental
methods, and the nature of the lahoratories involved. There has,
for example, been an impressive increase in the number of academic
studies on liquid crystals. The works herewith published also
represent an im pressive variety of traditional and novel
eXperimental techniques for the study of liquid crystals. These
include rheology, infrared spec troscopy, dielectrics, ultrasonics,
pulsed NMR, the Kerr effect, plus thermal and electrical
conductivity.
Thermal analysis cuts a broad swath through contemporary science.
Within this domain, advances in instrumentation permit the
application of quantitative calorimetry to the full spectrum of
modern materials. This can be illustrated perhaps no better than by
the set of contributions which make up this Volume II of Analytical
Calorimetry. Comprehensive studies are included on an array of
polymers, copolymers, and polyblends. Calorimetry is also reported
on biopolymers, gels, liquid crystals, alloys, and on a variety of
inorganic compounds and materials including moon rocks. Applica-
tions of calorimetric techniques to chemical reaction are also
detailed. These include t~e study of decompositions, catalytic
reductions, kinetics of dissolution, and the measurement of poly-
merization heats as well as the curing of thermosetting resins. The
techniques employed are principally differential thermal analysis
and differential scanning calorimetry. Several contribu- tors have
also illustrated the application of important and related
techniques such as thermogravimetry, thermal depolarization
analysis, and thermetric titrations. The contributions to this
volume represent papers presented before the American Chemical
Society Symposium held in Chicago, September 14 and 15, 1970. This
symposium 0n Analytical Calori- metry was sponsored by the Division
of Analytical Chemistry.
Proceedings of the American Chemical Society Symposium on
Analytical Calorimetry San Francisco Cali.
This volume contains papers presented at the Second Symposium on
Ordered Fluids and Liquid Crystals held at the 158th National
Meeting of the American Chemical Society, New York, Sep tember,
1969. The Symposium was sponsored by the Division of Colloid and
Surface Chemistry. The proceedings for the first symposium on this
subject were published by the American Chemical Society in the
Advances in Chemistry Series. In the preface to the volume for the
first meet ing held four years ago, we noted that research on
liquid crystals had gone through tremendous fluctuations, with
peaks of activity around 1900 and again in the early 1930's. The
present period of high activity which started about 1960 has
continued to exhibit acceleration. The reason for the persistent
growth in the field is due to the increasing recognition of the
important role played by liquid crystals in both biological systems
and in items of commerce as diverse as detergents and electronic
components. Addi tionally, more powerful and sophisticated
instrumentation is pro viding a basis for understanding the
properties of the liquid crystalline state as weIl as yielding
inc~s~ve tests for the theories of mesophase structure which are
only now reaching astate of maturity. Julian F. Johnson Roger S.
Porter v CONTENTS Thermal Phase Transitions in Biomembranes * . * *
* * * . * * 1 Joseph M. Steim Conditions of Stability for
Liquid-Crystalline Phospholipid Membranes .
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