Synthetic Molecular Sequences in Materials Science

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  • © 2023

Overview

  • The first systematic monograph of the topic
  • Provides a unique point of view in learning materials science
  • Features work in diverse research fields, making its contents highly interdisciplinary

Part of the book series: NIMS Monographs (NIMSM)

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About this book

This monograph shares a newly emerging point of view among researchers and students in the field of materials science. Inspired by the presence of precisely determined molecular-level sequence structures in a wide range of biomolecules, a growing number of synthetic compounds with the same structural feature are appearing day by day. These examples in the interdisciplinary areas of materials science are collected in this monograph to provide readers with a good understanding of the state-of-the-art accessible structural level, characteristic features, and future potentials of these types of compounds. The major target audience of this monograph include Ph.D. students and researchers who have just begun their careers, who are seeking novel research directions, ideas, and inspiration. Among the diverse examples of synthetic molecular sequences referred to in the monograph, experienced experts can also find work that is informative and relevant to their own research, making the book worthwhile reading for these specialists. 

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Table of contents (5 chapters)

Authors and Affiliations

  • International Center for Materials Nanoarchitectonics, National Institute for Materials Science, Tsukuba, Japan

    Kentaro Tashiro

About the author

Kentaro Tashiro received his Ph.D. from the University of Tokyo in 2000 and is currently working as a principal researcher in the National Institute for Materials Science, where he is pursuing the study of sequence structures in the intra- and intermolecular level. Part of his work along with this concept is summarized in a chapter contributed to Chemical Science of π-Electron Systems (Springer 2015), and has been published in internationally renowned journals such as JACS, ACIE, and ChemCommun. The author won the Chemical Society of Japan Award for Young Chemists in 2007.

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