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6 - A miscellany of physical properties

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 November 2009

Jordi Fraxedas
Affiliation:
Institute of Earth Sciences, CSIC, Barcelona, Spain
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Summary

Forget it! Forget it! Everything I write is just so much bleating!

Gary Larson, Last Chapter and Worse

After having discussed many aspects related to MOMs in the previous chapters, from the synthesis of the building blocks, the molecules, to the assembling of such molecules in the solid state in the form of single crystals and thin films, this last chapter is devoted to the physical properties of MOMs based on selected examples. The reader should be aware that this selection, being personal and thus inevitably partial, does not cover the plethora of examples that can be found in the literature. I assume the risk of overlooking some important works. In order to apologize in advance for not including several important investigations I reproduce the wise comment from M. Faraday written in 1859 but of surprising actuality (Faraday, 1859):

I very fully join in the regret…that scientific men do not know more perfectly what has been done, or what their companions are doing; but I am afraid the misfortune is inevitable. It is certainly impossible for any person who wishes to devote a portion of his time to chemical experiment, to read all the books and papers that are published in connection with his pursuit; their number is immense, and the labour of winnowing out the few experimental and theoretical truths which in many of them are embarrassed by a very large proportion of uninteresting matter, of imagination, and of error, is such, that most persons who try the experiment are quickly induced to make a selection in their reading, and thus inadvertently, at times, pass by what is really good.

Type
Chapter
Information
Molecular Organic Materials
From Molecules to Crystalline Solids
, pp. 242 - 306
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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