Supramolecular chemistry is a central theme not only in chemistry, but in neighboring disciplines including physics and the biological sciences. The author has introduced this notion and has been awarded the Nobel Prize for his achievements in this area. He presents here the concepts, lines of development and perspectives of this highly interdisciplinary and burgeoning field of research.
Topics include:
- molecular recognition
- catalysis and transport processes
- molecular and supramolecular devices
- self-processes
By placing the basic concepts into a broader perspective, the author succeeds in inspiring, stimulating and challenging the creative imagination of his reader.From the Contents:
From Molecular to Supramolecular Chemistry/
Anion Coordination Chemistry and the Recognition of Anionic Substrates/
Coreceptor Molecules and Multiple Recognition/
Supramolecular Reactivity and Catalysis/
Transport Processes and Carrier Design/
From Supermolecules to Polymolecular Assemblies/
Molecular and Supramolecular Devices/
Self-Processes/
Programmed (Supra)Molecular Systems/
From Structure to Information. The Challenge of Instructed Chemistry
Jean-Marie Lehn is a French chemist. He received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry together with Donald Cram and Charles Pedersen in 1987 for his synthesis of cryptands.Jean-Marie Lehn Supramolecular Chemistry Concepts and Perspectives Chemistry Beyond the Molecule Where nature finishes producing its own species, man begins, using natural things and with the help of this nature, to create an infinity of species. Leonardo da Vinci Molecular chemistry rules the covalent bond. Supramolecular chemistry is chemistry beyond the molecule , whose goal is to gain control over the intermolecular non-covalent bond. It is concerned with the entities l³%