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The Language of Shape:

The Role of Curvature in Condensed Matter: Physics, Chemistry and Biology
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Elsevier, Nov 19, 1996 - Science - 383 pages
This book develops the thesis that structure and function in a variety of condensed systems - from the atomic assemblies in inorganic frameworks and organic molecules, through molecular self-assemblies to proteins - can be unified when curvature and surface geometry are taken together with molecular shape and forces. An astonishing variety of synthetic and biological assemblies can be accurately modelled and understood in terms of hyperbolic surfaces, whose richness and beauty are only now being revealed by applied mathematicians, physicists, chemists and crystallographers. These surfaces, often close to periodic minimal surfaces, weave and twist through space, carving out interconnected labyrinths whose range of topologies and symmetries challenge the imaginative powers.

The book offers an overview of these structures and structural transformations, convincingly demonstrating their ubiquity in covalent frameworks from zeolites used for cracking oil and pollution control to enzymes and structural proteins, thermotropic and lyotropic bicontinuous mesophases formed by surfactants, detergents and lipids, synthetic block copolymer and protein networks, as well as biological cell assemblies, from muscles to membranes in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. The relation between structure and function is analysed in terms of the previously neglected hidden variables of curvature and topology. Thus, the catalytic activity of zeolites and enzymes, the superior material properties of interpenetrating networks in microstructured polymer composites, the transport requirements in cells, the transmission of nerve signals and the folding of DNA can be more easily understood in the light of this.

The text is liberally sprinkled with figures and colour plates, making it accessible to both the beginning graduate student and researchers in condensed matter physics and chemistry, mineralogists, crystallographers and biologists.

  

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Review: The Language of Shape: The Role of Curvature in Condensed Matter: Physics, Chemistry and Biology

User Review  - Aurora - Goodreads

Glorious, beautiful book. This was a present to myself, as will be reading it through... Read full review

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Contents

Chapter 1 The Mathematics of Curvature
1
Chapter 2 The Lessons of Chemistry
43
Chapter 3 Molecular Forces and SelfAssembly
87
The Geometric Forms due to SelfAssembly
141
Chapter 5 Lipid SelfAssembly and Function In Biological Systems
199
Chapter 6 Folding and Function In Proteins and DNA
237
Chapter 7 Cytomembranes and Cubic Membrane Systems Revisited
257
Chapter 8 Some Miscellaneous Speculations
339
Index
365
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About the author (1996)

Steve Hyde is the founder and CEO of Hyde Rx Services Corp., which provides low-cost prescription drug benefits to self-insuring companies all over the United States. In the 1970s he founded Peak Health Care, one of the nation's first HMOs, and many of his innovations are still being used today.

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