Inhalt des Dokuments
Dynamics of Self-Organized and Self-Assembled Structure
Lecture course in Winter Semester 2010/11, 3
credit points (ECTS).
Lecturer:
Prof. Dr.
Raymond Kapral, University of Toronto
Frist lecture: Monday, Oktober 25, 16h, ER 164
Day, time and place
Monday, 16 -18 h, ER
164
Thursday, 14 -16 h, ER 164
Dates:
Oktober 25 and 28
Novermber 8 and 11
November 15 and 18
Access to lecture pdfs is
found here [1].
Abstract
"Similar looking patterns occur in widely different
systems under a variety of
conditions. For example, in
phase-segregating mixtures where domains of two
phases form and
coarsen in time, or the liquid crystal phases which arise from
the organization of rod-like molecules.
The self-assembly of
molecular groups into complex structures is the basis for
many
of the developments in nanomaterial technology. In
far-from-equilibrium
conditions new structures with distinctive
properties are seen. Since systems driven
out of equilibrium by
flows of matter or energy are commonly encountered in nature,
the study of these systems takes on added importance. Many
biological systems
fall into this far-from-equilibrium
category.
This course will discuss how such pattern
formation processes occur in nonlinear
dissipative systems and
how they can be modeled on mesoscopic
sales."
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