ABSTRACT

Do you ever wonder why size is so important at the scale of nanosystems? Do you want to understand the fundamental principles that govern the properties of nanomaterials? Do you want to establish a foundation for working in the field of nanoscience and nanotechnology? Then this book is written with you in mind.

Foundations for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology provides some of the physical chemistry needed to understand why properties of small systems differ both from their constituent molecular entities and from the corresponding bulk matter. This is not a book about nanoscience and nanotechnology, but rather an exposition of basic knowledge required to understand these fields. The collection of topics makes it unique, and these topics include:

  • The concept of quantum confinement and its consequences for electronic behaviour (Part II)
  • The importance of surface thermodynamics for activity and interactions of nanoscale systems (Part III)
  • The need to consider fluctuations as well as mean properties in small systems (Part IV)
  • The interaction of light with matter and specific applications of spectroscopy and microscopy (Part V)

This book is written for senior undergraduates or junior graduate students in science or engineering disciplines who wish to learn about or work in the areas of nanoscience and nanotechnology, but who do not have the requisite background in chemistry or physics. It may also be useful as a refresher or summary text for chemistry and physics students since the material is focused on those aspects of quantum mechanics, thermodynamics, and statistical mechanics that specifically relate to the size of objects.

part I|11 pages

Introduction

part II|54 pages

Understanding quantum confinement

part III|76 pages

Understanding surface thermodynamics

chapter 6|20 pages

The basics of thermodynamics

chapter 7|26 pages

Surface thermodynamics

chapter 8|4 pages

The work function

part IV|52 pages

Understanding fluctuations in small systems

chapter 10|13 pages

Basic statistical concepts

chapter 11|7 pages

Partition functions

chapter 12|5 pages

Fluctuations in closed and open systems

chapter 13|20 pages

Measuring concentration changes

part V|97 pages

Understanding light-matter interactions

chapter 15|21 pages

Molecular spectroscopy

chapter 16|32 pages

Application of fluorescence microscopy

chapter 18|3 pages

Epilog and acknowledgments

part VI|20 pages

Problems and references

chapter 19|13 pages

Problems

chapter 20|4 pages

References