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CombShaped Polymers and Liquid Crystals (Specialty Polymers),Used
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to the American Edition We are pleased that our modest work, published some time ago in Russian in Moscow* and which attracted the attention of polymer specialists,t will now be available to the EngJish speaking audience of scientists chemists, physicists, and technologists engaged in creating new types of polymer materi als for modern technology and working on the fundamental prob lems of the solidstate physics and structure of polymer due to the initiative of Plenum Press. In polymer science, the 1980s were marked by the birth of a new field and a new scientific trend related to the dis covery and study of a previously unknown class of polymers thermotropic liquidcrystalline polymers and the further development of the fundamental theoretical concepts of the liquidcrystalline (mesomorphic) state of macromolecular com pounds. This state is a phase state in thermodynamic equi librium characterized by the anisotropy of the structure and properties as a result of onedimensional or twodimensional ordering. Such systems have an ordered but simultaneously labile structure which can easily be altered by mechanical, electrical, or magnetic fields; the polymer system then acquires unique physical and optical properties. These prop erties, which are acquired in the liquidcrvstalline state, are then fixed in the solid at the operating temperatures. *N. A. Plate and V. P. Shibaev. CombShaped Polymers and Li quid Crystals [in RussianJ. Khimiya, Moscow (1980). tSee the review of this book by H. Mark in J. Polym. Sci. Polym. Lett. Ed. , 20, 139 (L982).
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