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Zusatztext Single molecule manipulation is an exciting area of research which made important breakthroughs in nanoscience and which could find potential applications in a diverse range of disciplines, including chemistry, biology, physics, material and polymer science, and engineering. New and experienced AFM researchers looking for applications beyond imaging will find a wealth of information in this informative volume. — Anticancer Research, 32: 715-720 (2012) Informationen zum Autor Anne-Sophie Duwez received her Ph.D. in Chemistry in 1997 from the University of Namur, Belgium. She then moved to the Catholic University of Louvain as a Post-doctoral Researcher of the Belgian National Fund for Scientific Research. In 2002-2003, she was visiting scientist at the Max-Planck Institute for Polymer Research in Mainz, Germany. She then returned to the Catholic University of Louvain as a senior scientist to develop AFM-based single molecule force spectroscopy. In 2006, she took up the Chair of Chemistry at Surfaces at the University of Liège. In 2007, she received a Starting Grant from the National Fund for Scientific Research to set up a new lab dedicated to advanced AFM techniques. She is currently professor of surface chemistry, chemistry of organic and bio materials, and nanotechnology. Her research interests focus on the development of AFM-based techniques, probes, and methods to manipulate single molecules. They include the investigation of mechanochemical processes in bio- and synthetic systems and the design of single molecule devices. Nicolas Willet studied chemistry at the University of Liège, Belgium. He studied protein folding during his master thesis and received his Ph.D. in 2007 for his work on the synthesis and characterization of triblock copolymer self-assemblies, carried out under the supervision of Professor Robert Jérôme (polymer chemistry). He then moved to the team of Professor Anne-Sophie Duwez where he performed AFM force spectroscopy on bio-inspired polymers. After his postdoctoral work with Professor Peter Hinterdorfer at the Institute of Biophysics of the University of Linz, Austria, he went back to the University of Liège in 2011, where he is currently working as an FNRS postdoctoral researcher. His research interests concern functional and responsive polymers, single-molecule force spectroscopy, molecular recognition, with a particular focus on the investigation of biological macromolecules' conformation. Klappentext "Scientists have long dreamed of working with single atoms and molecules. In 1952! Erwin Schrdinger wrote that we never experiment with just one electron or atom or molecule. With the invention of the scanning tunneling microscope (STM) in the early 1980s! that dream has become a reality. STM was capable of "seeing" atoms and molecules and! furthermore! of manipulating them individually! as demonstrated a few years later. Scientists can now play with single atoms! single molecules! and even single bonds"-- Zusammenfassung The manipulation of single molecules is still in its infancy but significant breakthroughs have been made in chemistry, biology, physics, engineering, and polymer science. Demonstrating the potential of atomic force microscopy (AFM) beyond imaging, this book discusses concepts and methodologies used to manipulate and study single (bio)molecules with AFM. The first part of the text is dedicated to the pulling of single molecules with force spectroscopy to investigate molecular interactions, mechanics, and mechanochemical processes. The second part addresses the manipulation, repositioning, and targeted delivery of single molecules on substrates. Inhaltsverzeichnis Pulling on Single Molecules with Force Spectroscopy: Molecular Recognition Force Spectroscopy. Mechanics of Proteins and Tailored Mechanics of Engineered Proteins. Mechani...