''Made to Measure'' introduces a general audience to
one of today's most exciting areas of scientific
research: materials science. Philip Ball describes how
scientists are currently inventing thousands of new
materials, ranging from synthetic skin, blood, and bone
to substances that repair themselves and adapt to their
environment, that swell and flex like muscles, that
repel any ink or paint, and that capture and store the
energy of the Sun. He shows how all this is being
accomplished precisely because, for the first time in
history, materials are being 'made to measure': designed
for particular applications, rather than discovered in
nature or by haphazard experimentation. Now scientists
literally put new materials together on the drawing
board in the same way that a blueprint is specified for
a house or an electronic circuit.But the designers are
working not with skylights and alcoves, not with
transistors and capacitors, but with molecules and
atoms.This book is written in the same engaging manner
as Ball's popular book on chemistry, ''Designing the
Molecular World'', and it links insights from chemistry,
biology, and physics with those from engineering as it
outlines the various areas in which new materials will
transform our lives in the twenty-first century. The
chapters provide vignettes from a broad range of
selected areas of materials science and can be read as
separate essays. The subjects include photonic
materials, materials for information storage, smart
materials, biomaterials, biomedical materials, materials
for clean energy, porous materials, diamond and hard
materials, new polymers, and surfaces and
interfaces. |
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