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Moleculen de elementen en de architectuur van alles (2014)

door Theodore W. Gray

LedenBesprekingenPopulariteitGemiddelde beoordelingAanhalingen
695832,861 (4.55)9
In his highly anticipated sequel to The Elements, Theodore Gray demonstrates how the elements of the periodic table combine to form the molecules that make up our world. Everything physical is made up of the elements and the infinite variety of molecules they form when they combine with each other. In Molecules, Theodore Gray takes the next step in the grand story that began with the periodic table in his best-selling book, The Elements: A Visual Exploration of Every Known Atom in the Universe. Here, he explores through fascinating stories and trademark stunning photography the most interesting, essential, useful, and beautiful of the millions of chemical structures that make up every material in the world. Gray begins with an explanation of how atoms bond to form molecules and compounds, as well as the difference between organic and inorganic chemistry. He then goes on to explore the vast array of materials molecules can create, including: soaps and solvents; goops and oils; rocks and ores; ropes and fibers; painkillers and dangerous drugs; sweeteners; perfumes and stink bombs; colors and pigments; and controversial compounds including asbestos, CFCs, and thimerosal. Big, gorgeous photographs, as well as diagrams of the compounds and their chemical bonds, rendered with never before seen beauty, fill the pages and capture molecules in their various states. As he did in The Elements, Gray shows us molecules as we've never seen them before. It's the perfect book for his loyal fans who've been eager for more and for anyone fascinated with the mysteries of the material world.--… (meer)
  1. 00
    Stuff Matters: Exploring the Marvelous Materials That Shape Our Man-Made World door Mark Miodownik (2wonderY)
    2wonderY: Both of these books delight in the chemical world and present it in a fascinating way.
  2. 00
    World of Carbon door Isaac Asimov (themulhern)
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1-5 van 8 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
This beautiful book that is both a gorgeous “coffee table book” and an engrossing and informative guide to many known molecules is a follow-up book or perhaps companion compendium to the author’s previous book, The Elements: A Visual Exploration of Every Known Atom in the Universe. The author explains in the introduction that while the periodic table is complete, “there is no catalog of all the molecules in the universe, and there can’t be. There may be only six different chess pieces, but it’s out of the question to list all the ways of arranging them on the chess board.” Thus he chose to write about the molecules that interest him the most, and that “illustrate the deeper connections and broader concepts that unify them all.”

Gray begins with an introduction about the electrostatic force that holds compounds together in a single atom as well as in compounds and molecules. He reviews the architecture of atoms which is key to how they can combine. Then he goes into specifics.

Chapter 2 is a riff on alchemical names, and an explanation for many of named categories, like salts, acids, alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, etc. Chapter 3 explains the distinction between organic and inorganic compounds, or as he calls it, “Dead or Alive.” Chapter 4 uses the relationship between oil and water to discuss bonds between atoms and what that means for molecules. In particular he focuses on “the magic of soap” and tells readers how soap works. Chapter 5 tackles the difference between compounds that are “mineral” and those that are “vegetable” - oil and wax are the main topics of this chapter. Chapter 6 moves onto rock and ore. Chapter 7 is for rope and fiber - what they are made of and how they work, including a section on animal-made fibers. The most widely used animal fibers, he avers, come from “soft and warm animals such as sheep and fluffy birds.” What are they made of and why are they warm? In Chapter 8, the author writes about “Pain and Pleasure” and the molecular make-up of what compounds that cause pain in the body and compounds that relieves it. Chapter 9, “Sweet and Double Sweet” relates to sugars and sugar substitutes. (Stevia packets, you might be interested to know, are 96 percent glucose sugar, with only 4 percent made up of stevia extract.). In Chapter 10, Gray expands on the distinctions between natural and artificial compounds. Chapter 11 deals with scent, or “molecules as messengers.” Chapter 12 explores the colors of molecules and how they come to be. The 13th chapter is called “I Hate That Molecule.” Here the author writes about compounds that have been caught up in politics, such as those comprising vaccines. He addresses the controversy about vaccines containing thimerosal, for example, and notes: “The number of children who developed autism as a result of being given vaccines containing thimerosal is [easy] to determine: it is known to be exactly zero.” He also deals with compounds containing lead, affecting the ozone layer, contributing to global warming, and causing disease - he calls asbestos “The Most Horrible Very Bad Inorganic Compound Ever.” Finally, Chapter 14 deals with the molecules that “run the machinery of life” DNA and RNA.

All of these facts, fun as they are, are secondary to the visual aspects of the book, in which amazing large color photos (by both Theodore Gray and Nick Mann) of both the molecules and products derived from them make up the bulk of the presentations.

Evaluation: If you ever thought chemistry was “boring,” you are in for a surprise and an intellectual and visual treat. This book is outstanding, and will stimulate your desire to know more about molecules, and how people figured out how to use them. ( )
  nbmars | Feb 18, 2021 |
This is a follow-up of sorts to Theodore Gray's earlier book, The Elements: A Visual Exploration of Every Known Atom in the Universe. Unlike that one, this volume cannot possibly be comprehensive because while there are a limited number of elements in the periodic table, the ways in which those elements can combine into molecules is practically infinite. So Gray instead takes us through a sampling of interesting and important molecules, loosely organized by what they're used for by human beings.

If you've read The Elements -- and you should! -- this one has a very similar sensibility, with lots and lots of photos of substances the author has painstakingly collected and managed to make visually interesting, despite the tendency of most pure substances to actually just look like boring white powders. There's a nice little basic chemistry lesson at the beginning and all kinds of wonderfully fascinating information to be found throughout the entire book, as Gray tells us, for instance, why teflon is so slippery, how soap works, why oil and water don't mix, and what's in artificial sweeteners, along with tons of other, sometimes much weirder and more obscure things. He does this with a lot of genial humor; in places this book is genuinely laugh-out-loud funny. But he also takes a wonderfully hard-headed and clear-eyed look at things like what the difference is between "natural" and "artificial" substances is (answer: very little), at chemicals that get an undeserved bad rap, and at ones that genuinely are bad news.

It's all extremely interesting and delightfully fun, as weird as that might seem for a book about chemistry, even for a science-minded reader like me. More than that, though, I think it really has shifted my perspective on the world around me. It's one thing to be aware, hypothetically, somewhere in the back of your mind, that everything in the world is made of molecules and almost everything that happens in it comes down to the action of these small, varied entities fitting together and breaking apart, but it's a different experience entirely to find yourself stopping to think about what that really means, and to marvel at the ways in which we human beings have found to shape these tiny interactions to do some very big things. And all the more so when you contemplate just how simple so many of these ultra-important molecules are, and how much small differences between them -- even ones so small it can be hard to notice them on a diagram -- matter in our lives.

In other words, this is pretty, it's entertaining, it's educational, and it's actually kind of mind-blowing. A very, very cool book! ( )
  bragan | Aug 10, 2020 |
Cet ouvrage est incontournable pour les passionnés désireux d'en savoir plus sur notre
  ACParakou | Nov 29, 2019 |
The p-book is truly beautiful, but the iPad version of the book is remarkable!
You can play around with the jiggling molecules in 3D, while the app is presenting all the text from the book illustrated by interactive animations. One of the rare examples of a book vastly improved, not degraded by "appification". ( )
  haraldgroven | Sep 8, 2019 |
Another great book from Theodore Gray. This is a winner and perfect companion for The Elements. ( )
  KatyBee | Feb 6, 2016 |
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In his highly anticipated sequel to The Elements, Theodore Gray demonstrates how the elements of the periodic table combine to form the molecules that make up our world. Everything physical is made up of the elements and the infinite variety of molecules they form when they combine with each other. In Molecules, Theodore Gray takes the next step in the grand story that began with the periodic table in his best-selling book, The Elements: A Visual Exploration of Every Known Atom in the Universe. Here, he explores through fascinating stories and trademark stunning photography the most interesting, essential, useful, and beautiful of the millions of chemical structures that make up every material in the world. Gray begins with an explanation of how atoms bond to form molecules and compounds, as well as the difference between organic and inorganic chemistry. He then goes on to explore the vast array of materials molecules can create, including: soaps and solvents; goops and oils; rocks and ores; ropes and fibers; painkillers and dangerous drugs; sweeteners; perfumes and stink bombs; colors and pigments; and controversial compounds including asbestos, CFCs, and thimerosal. Big, gorgeous photographs, as well as diagrams of the compounds and their chemical bonds, rendered with never before seen beauty, fill the pages and capture molecules in their various states. As he did in The Elements, Gray shows us molecules as we've never seen them before. It's the perfect book for his loyal fans who've been eager for more and for anyone fascinated with the mysteries of the material world.--

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