Chemical Crystallography with Pulsed Neutrons and Synchroton X-Rays e-bog
436,85 DKK
(inkl. moms 546,06 DKK)
X-ray and neutron crystallography have played an increasingly impor- tant role in the chemical and biochemical sciences over the past fifty years. The principal obstacles in this methodology, the phase problem and com- puting, have been overcome. The former by the methods developed in the 1960's and just recognised by the 1985 Chemistry Nobel Prize award to Karle and Hauptman, the latter by the...
E-bog
436,85 DKK
Forlag
Springer
Udgivet
6 december 2012
Genrer
TGMT
Sprog
English
Format
pdf
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9789400940277
X-ray and neutron crystallography have played an increasingly impor- tant role in the chemical and biochemical sciences over the past fifty years. The principal obstacles in this methodology, the phase problem and com- puting, have been overcome. The former by the methods developed in the 1960's and just recognised by the 1985 Chemistry Nobel Prize award to Karle and Hauptman, the latter by the dramatic advances that have taken place in computer technology in the past twenty years. Within the last decade, two new radiation sources have been added to the crystallographer's tools. One is synchrotron X-rays and the other is spallation neutrons. Both have much more powerful fluxes than the pre- vious sources and they are pulsed rather than continuos. New techniques are necessary to fully exploit the intense continuos radiation spectrum and its pulsed property. Both radiations are only available from particular National Laboratories on a guest-user basis for scientists outside these Na- tional Laboratories. Hitherto, the major emphasis on the use of these facilities has been in solid-state physics, and the material, engineering and biological sciences. We believe that there is equivalent potential to applications which are pri- marily chemical or biochemical.