Petrov, Yu. I. Physics of Small Particles (Fizika malykh chastits). Institute of Chemical Physics of the USSR Academy of Sciences, 1982. In Russian.

Petrov, Yu. I. Physics of Small Particles (Fizika malykh chastits). Institute of Chemical Physics of the USSR Academy of Sciences, 1982. In Russian.

$50.00
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Petrov, Yu. I. Physics of Small Particles (Fizika malykh chastits). Institute of Chemical Physics of the USSR Academy of Sciences, 1982. In Russian.
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Petrov, Yu. I. Physics of Small Particles (Fizika malykh chastits). Institute of Chemical Physics of the USSR Academy of Sciences, 1982. In Russian.

$50.00

Петров Ю. И. Физика малых частиц / Академия наук СССР, Ордена Ленина Институт химической физики. — Москва: Издательство «Наука», 1982. — 360 с., ил. Твёрдый издательский переплёт, обычный формат. Тираж 2400 экз.
Состояние хорошее: переплёт крепкий, золотое тиснение немного потёрто, страницы чистые, блок ровный.
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Petrov Yu. I. Physics of Small Particles / USSR Academy of Sciences, Order of Lenin Institute of Chemical Physics. — Moscow: «Nauka» Publishing House, 1982. — 360 pp., illustrated. Publisher's hardcover binding, standard format. Print run 2,400 copies.
Condition good: binding tight, gilt slightly rubbed, pages clean, text block straight.

This monograph by Yu. I. Petrov of the Institute of Chemical Physics of the USSR Academy of Sciences was among the earliest Soviet treatments of what would later be recognized as a foundational subject of nanoscience: the size-dependent physical behaviour of small inorganic particles in the transition régime between isolated atoms and bulk solids. Petrov surveys the principal observable properties — lattice parameters and structural stability, melting and surface energies, electronic and magnetic structure, optical absorption, and catalytic activity — and tracks their evolution as particle size shrinks from the micro-crystalline through the cluster scale to discrete molecular aggregates. Each chapter juxtaposes Soviet and Western experimental data with the theoretical models then current, including thermodynamic, electronic-band and quantum-size frameworks. The Order of Lenin Institute of Chemical Physics, founded by Nobel laureate N. N. Semyonov, was the leading Soviet centre for the chemical physics of condensed matter, and the volume reflects the institute's empirical breadth as well as its characteristic insistence on the chemical individuality of finite particles. 

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