ISBN-13: 9781461424444 / Angielski / Miękka / 2012 / 518 str.
ISBN-13: 9781461424444 / Angielski / Miękka / 2012 / 518 str.
The present volume is the second in a two-volume set dealing with modelling and numerical simulations in electrochemistry. Emphasis is placed on the aspect of nanoelectrochemical issues. It seems appropriate at this juncture to mention the n- growing body of opinion in some circles that George Box was right when he stated, three decades ago, that All models are wrong, but some are useful . Actually, when the statement itself was made it would have been more appropriate to say that All models are inaccurate but most are useful nonetheless . At present, however, the statement, as it was made, is far more appropriate and closer to the facts than ever before. Currently, we are in the midst of the age of massively abundant data. Today s philosophy seems to be that we do not need to know why one piece of information is better than another except through the statistics of incoming and outgoing links between information and this is good enough. It is why, both in principle and in practice, one can translate between two languages, without knowledge of either. While none of this can be ignored, and it may even be true that All models are wrong and increasingly you can succeed without them the traditional approach of scienti?c modelling is still the order of the day. That approach may be stated as hypothesize measure model test. It is in this light that the present volume should be viewed."
This volume is meant as an introductory resource aimed at practitioners of electrochemistry research, technology, and development mainly at the atomic, molecular or macromolecular levels. Thus emphasis is placed at length scales in the 1-100 nm range. The volume will help provide understanding of electrochemical phenomena and materials at the nanoscale through modeling and numeric simulations. It also serves as a means to create and use structures, electrochemically based devices, and systems that possess novel properties and functions because of their small or intermediate sizes.