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Wiley-VCH: New York, 1997. xi + 261 pp. ISBN
3-527-29325-6. $140.00.
The first thing that strikes one about
Dendritic Macromolecules: Concepts, Syntheses,
Perspectives by Newkome, Moorefield, and Vögtle is its
size. Befitting a book devoted to the largest discrete organic and
organometallic compounds known, its considerable height means it will have to
reside on the top of most book shelves. The benefit is full,
rather than abbreviated, chemical structures. Full structures are
most readily understood, and high-generation dendrimers are
simply beautiful structures upon which to gaze.
The first chapter, written by W. L. Mattice, is
devoted to polymer properties. It serves as a useful and
important introduction to those without a polymer chemistry
background. The material within this chapter largely stands
alone, as subsequent discussions (too few) of the physical
and structural aspects of dendrimers do not make significant use of
this introductory material. The second chapter,
entitled "From Theory to Practice: Historical Perspectives",
presents a terrifically thorough and objective historical account of
the origins of the dendrimer field. It is certainly refreshing to
see the authors trace the origins of their own early
ideas in the field with an effort to accurately apportion credit to
others. Likewise, the relationship between dendrimers and
fractal geometry is nicely presented.
The third chapter is devoted to the difficult issue
of nomenclature. As noted by the authors, the Chemical
Abstracts and IUPAC systems for naming dendrimers are useless in
that deriving a structure from a compound name is an
exercise nearly as impossible as the reverse process. Newkome
has devised a particularly useful and concise nomenclature
that provides a more direct connection between name and
structure. Many examples are presented that effectively illustrate the
use of this method. A second concise nomenclature, the
fractal notation devised by Mendenhall, is briefly
presented at the end of the chapter. Unfortunately, neither of these
nomenclatures is in wide use.
Finding a logical way to organize a topic-ranging
from organic synthesis to materials science-with
applications ranging from gene therapy to inks and toners-is a
tremendous challenge, and there is no way to please everyone. The
authors have chosen to focus much of the book on how the
dendrimers are synthesized. Thus, Chapters 4 and 5 deal with
dendrimers synthesized by divergent and convergent approaches,
respectively.
Chapters 6, 7, and 8 focus on the synthesis of
hyperbranched polymers, chiral dendrimers, and
dendrimers containing metal sites, respectively. A
minor criticism is that perfect structural representations are used even
though they can be deceptive, as many dendrimers, particularly
those synthesized divergently, may contain significant defects.
One must, on looking at each structure in this book,
consider whether the actual compound is in fact homogeneous.
The organization within most of these chapters is determined by
the nature of the branch point (multiplicity and
composition). This organization facilitates finding a particular type
of dendrimer, but it makes it virtually impossible to find
a specific application, such as drug delivery.
Applications are dispersed within the synthetic
chapters; but the index, which is adequate but not comprehensive,
does not always help (e.g., for drug delivery). Fortunately, there
is an absolutely wonderful built-in redundancy with
Chapter 10, entitled "Utilitarian Aspects", containing
citations organized by application. Many practitioners will find
themselves frequently consulting this comprehensive list. Rounding
out the book is Chapter 11, which details pioneering efforts
to use dendrimers as building blocks in the construction of
larger structures, phases, aggregates, etc. The final chapter
contains a compilation of review articles published up to early 1996.
Written by some of the founders of the field and
pioneering researchers, Dendritic Macromolecules: Concepts,
Syntheses, Perspectives provides a review of the dendrimer literature
up to early 1996 that is comprehensive and well
organized. Although some aspects could have been dealt with in
more detail, the book largely succeeds in its ambitious goal
of reviewing all facets of this exciting new area of
chemistry. It is the first book devoted entirely to this novel class
of polymers and is definitely an essential book for
practitioners of dendrimer chemistry and allied fields.
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