Nuclear Magnetic Resonance: Special Techniques and Dynamics: Volume 176 (Methods in Enzymology)

Nuclear Magnetic Resonance: Special Techniques and Dynamics: Volume 176 (Methods in Enzymology)

by Melvin I . Simon (Editor), JohnN.Abelson (Editor), ThomasL.James (Editor), NormanJ.Oppenheimer (Editor)

Synopsis

This volume, as does Volume 177, provides a general background of modern NMR techniques, with a specific focus on NMR techniques that pertain to proteins and enzymology, and a snapshot of the current state of the art in NMR experimental techniques. These books enable the reader to understand a given technique, to evaluate its strengths and limitations, to decide which is the best approach, and, finally, to design an experiment using the chosen technique to solve a problem.

$90.83

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 530
Publisher: Academic Press
Published: 01 Sep 1989

ISBN 10: 0121820777
ISBN 13: 9780121820770

Media Reviews
Praise for the Volume There is little doubt but that... this is a useful volume to have available at the lab bench. --FEBS LETTERS The editors have succeeded in producing a book that can serve as a very good source of information when one wishes to begin working in a new area... The individual chapters generally provide well-balanced, reliable, and up-to-date accounts of the techniques, with adequate references to the major basic papers. This is a good, readable book and a valuable reference volume. --ANALYTICAL BIOCHEMISTRY Praise for the Series The Methods in Enzymology series represents the gold-standard. --NEUROSCIENCE Incomparably useful. --ANALYTICAL BIOCHEMISTRY It is a true 'methods' series, including almost every detail from basic theory to sources of equipment and reagents, with timely documentation provided on each page. --BIO/TECHNOLOGY The series has been following the growing, changing and creation of new areas of science. It should be on the shelves of all libraries in the world as a whole collection. --CHEMISTRY IN INDUSTRY The appearance of another volume in that excellent series, Methods in Enzymology, is always a cause for appreciation for those who wish to successfully carry out a particular technique or prepare an enzyme or metabolic intermediate without the tiresome prospect of searching through unfamiliar literature and perhaps selecting an unproven method which is not easily reproduced. --AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MICROBIOLOGY NEWS If we had some way to find the work most often consulted in the laboratory, it could well be the multi-volume series Methods in Enzymology...a great work. --ENZYMOLOGIA A series that has established itself as a definitive reference for biochemists. --JOURNAL OF CHROMATOGRAPHY