The study of capillarity is in the midst of a veritable explosion. What is offered here is not a comprehensive review of the latest research but rather a compendium of principles designed for the undergraduate student and for readers interested in the physics underlying these phenomena.
Surface science has evolved beyond being a sub-field of chemistry or physics and has now become an underpinning science. The Third Edition of this book incorporates extensive worked solutions, as well as details on how problem solving relevant to surface science should be performed.
Based on the author's 15 years of teaching water-rock interactions and tried and tested in the classroom, Environmental Surfaces and Interfaces covers everything from the theory of charged particle surfaces to how minerals grow and dissolve to new frontiers in W-R interactions, such as nanoparticles, geomicrobiology, and climate change.
Intended to present the experimental methods to measure equilibria states of pure and mixed gases being adsorbed on the surface of solid materials. This book is designed for engineers and scientists from industry and academia who are interested in adsorption based gas separation processes.
Covers the physics and chemistry of surfaces. This work deals with the structure, thermodynamics, mobility of clean surfaces, and the interaction of gas molecules with solid surfaces. It explores the energetic particle interactions that are the basis for the majority of techniques developed to reveal the structure and chemistry of surfaces.
The newest edition of this textbook emphasizes modern surface chemistry and catalysis concepts uncovered by breakthough molecular level-studies of surfaces over the past three decades. This resource also serves as a reference for properties of surfaces and interfaces.
Covers the physics and chemistry of surfaces. The energetic particle interactions that are the basis for the majority of techniques developed to reveal the structure and chemistry of surfaces are explored including auger electron spectroscopy, low energy electron diffraction, scanning probe microscopy, and interfacial segregation.