1st Edition

Structural and Morphological Evolution in Metal-Organic Films and Multilayers

By Alokmay Datta, Smita Mukherjee Copyright 2016
    220 Pages
    by CRC Press

    220 Pages
    by CRC Press

    Structural and Morphological Evolution in Metal-Organic Films and Multilayers presents major results of the authors’ work carried out on Langmuir monolayers and Langmuir-Blodgett multilayers. The authors address two important questions:





    • Are metal-organic monolayer systems more like solids or more like liquids?


    • Does a two-dimensional system have different kind of bonds than a bulk or three-dimensional body?


    The book reveals the richness hidden in these supposedly well-known systems, including saturated, aliphatic fatty acids. It examines the mechanisms behind the growth of monolayers and multilayers of the molecules primarily from a physicist’s point of view. The authors highlight the relationship between molecular structure and domain structure as well as the various physical properties. The book also explores the interplay between physics and chemistry in metal ions.

    Monolayers and Multilayers. Preparing Monolayers and Multilayers. Probing Tools. Theoretical Background for Data Analysis. Headgroup Coordination and Film Structure. Headgroup Conformation and Film Structure. Evolution of Film Morphology. "Liquid" and "Solid" Films. Metal-Organics and Nanocrystal Formation. Conclusions and Outlook. Bibliography.

    Biography

    Alokmay Datta is a senior professor at Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics in Kolkata, India, whose research interest lies in structure and dynamics at surfaces and interfaces of soft materials, nanomaterials, and biomaterials. He has been working on Langmuir monolayers and Langmuir-Blodgett films for more than 20 years. He has introduced several new concepts and techniques to the study of these low-dimensional, complex systems, which have helped in a revival of interest in them.



    Smita Mukherjee is currently a guest researcher at the Central Glass and Ceramic Research Institute in Kolkata, India, perusing her interest in inorganic-organic hybrid structures. She previously worked as a PhD research scholar at Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics in Kolkata, India, exploring the morphological, structural, and spectroscopic aspects of metal-organic systems at air-water and air-solid interfaces (Langmuir monolayers and Langmuir-Blodgett films). She continued her post-doctoral research in the interdisciplinary field of soft materials, including polymers, biomaterials, and complex metal-organic nanostructures, at the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay and the Institut des Nanosciences de Paris in France.