Soap, Science, and Flat-Screen TVs: A History of Liquid Crystals

Awards:   Winner of Rated one of the top 5 books reviewed in 2011 by Physics Today Voted as a Bestseller in Chemistry by The Library Journal. Winner of Rated one of the top 5 books reviewed in 2011 by Physics Today Voted as a Bestseller in Chemistry by The Library Journal. Winner of Rated one of the top 5 books reviewed in 2011 by ^IPhysics Today^R Voted as a Bestseller in Chemistry by The Library Journal.
Author:   David Dunmur (School of Chemistry, University of Southampton (retired)) ,  Tim Sluckin (School of Applied Mathematics, University of Southampton)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780199549405


Pages:   366
Publication Date:   04 November 2010
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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Soap, Science, and Flat-Screen TVs: A History of Liquid Crystals


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Awards

  • Winner of Rated one of the top 5 books reviewed in 2011 by Physics Today Voted as a Bestseller in Chemistry by The Library Journal.
  • Winner of Rated one of the top 5 books reviewed in 2011 by Physics Today Voted as a Bestseller in Chemistry by The Library Journal.
  • Winner of Rated one of the top 5 books reviewed in 2011 by ^IPhysics Today^R Voted as a Bestseller in Chemistry by The Library Journal.

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   David Dunmur (School of Chemistry, University of Southampton (retired)) ,  Tim Sluckin (School of Applied Mathematics, University of Southampton)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.10cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.70cm
Weight:   0.772kg
ISBN:  

9780199549405


ISBN 10:   0199549400
Pages:   366
Publication Date:   04 November 2010
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

1: Introduction: from carrots to displays 2: Crystals that flow: fact or fiction 3: Liquid crystals: where do they come from? 4: La Gloire Française 5: The meeting that wasn't and the meeting that was 6: The threads of life 7: Winds of war 8: Renaissance 9: An unlikely story 10: The light dawns in the west 11: The sun rises in the east 12: The new world of liquid crystals

Reviews

This is a readable introduction to an influential field, concentrating on personalities within political eras, and demonstrating that as complicated as the science might get, it is still a human endeavor, with all the attendant ambition, misunderstanding, dead ends and eventual enlightenment. Rob Hardy, The Dispatch The liquid crystal display has changed the world and will continue to do so. Soap, Science, and Flat-Screen TVs is a true and valuable history of its first 100 years, embracing as it does both the scientific literature and the history and socio-economic background of the individuals and institutions that make up the story. Bill Crossland, Times Higher Education Supplement


... engaging monograph ... I recommend this cultured chronicle of the people and history of a delicate state of matter that has had a profound influence on the technologies of communications and displays. Derry W. Jones, Contemporary Physics This is a truly stimulating look at the history and science of a little-understood phase of matter and a material that affects our lives everday [...] a truly useful addition to the pedagogical literatureon liquid crystals. Peter Collings, Physics Today It provides a perceptive insight into the evolution of the important area of soft matter and the development from this of an impressive display technology. S, Kumar, Chemistry World The authors delightful weaving of the influence of first individuals and then commercial companies with the advances in science pertinent to developing displays makes for fascinating and entertaining reading. Gerald R. Van Hecke, Science This is a readable introduction to an influential field, concentrating on personalities within political eras, and demonstrating that as complicated as the science might get, it is still a human endeavor, with all the attendant ambition, misunderstanding, dead ends and eventual enlightenment. Rob Hardy, The Dispatch The liquid crystal display has changed the world and will continue to do so. Soap, Science, and Flat-Screen TVs is a true and valuable history of its first 100 years, embracing as it does both the scientific literature and the history and socio-economic background of the individuals and institutions that make up the story. Bill Crossland, Times Higher Education Supplement


<br> Full of charming and not widely known historical anecdotes, this book describes the drama of liquid crystals science from its early days to modern technical applications. One of the most informative and entertaining pieces of popular science history I have seen in years. -- Alexander Y. Grosberg, New York University <br> Visual communication became transportable through the discovery of that strange state of matter, the liquid crystal. This history is a fascinating account of that discovery and its development and gives considerable insight into the social mechanisms of science in general. The authors do not evade the science itself, treating it lightly but appropriately. Altogether, a detailed, informative, and enthralling account of a crucial part of techonlogical and scientific history. -- Peter Atkins, Oxford University <br> Dunmur and Sluckin tell an absorbing and colourful story of an area of science that is both rich at the fundamental level and that has brought s


The liquid crystal display has changed the world and will continue to do so. Soap, Science, and Flat-Screen TVs is a true and valuable history of its first 100 years, embracing as it does both the scientific literature and the history and socio-economic background of the individuals and institutions that make up the story.


Author Information

David Dunmur received his undergraduate and postgraduate degrees from the University of Oxford. After 3 years as a research fellow in the newly formed Department of Theoretical Chemistry, University of Bristol, he was appointed in 1968 as a lecturer in Chemistry at the University of Sheffield, where he became Head of the Department of Chemistry from 1993 to 1996. He was a Fulbright Scholar at the University of California in 1980. In 1999 he received the George Gray Medal from the British Liquid Crystal Society. From 1996 to his retirement in 2005, he was a research Professor in chemical physics (liquid crystals) in the School of Chemistry, University of Southampton. Tim Sluckin was born in London in 1951, and educated in Cambridge and Nottingham, where he received his Ph.D in 1975 for a thesis on the theoretical physics of liquid helium. After several postdoctoral appointments in the USA and in the UK, he was appointed a lecturer in applied mathematics at the University of Southampton (UK) in 1981. Since 1995 he has been Professor of Applied Mathematical Physics at the University of Southampton. He has also spent extended periods of sabbatical leave abroad, including spells in France (Grenoble), Italy (Milan) and Israel (Haifa). His main research interests have been in mathematical and physical aspects of liquid crystals, but he also has interests in other fluid phenomena. Another of his interests is mathematical population biology, including, in particular, problems to do with human prehistory. More recently he has also published significantly in the history of science.

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