While it is responsible for today's abundance of flat screens--on
televisions, computers, and mobile devices--most of us have only heard
of it in the ubiquitous acronym, LCD, with little thought as to exactly
what it is: liquid crystal. In this book, Esther Leslie enlightens us,
offering an accessible and fascinating look at--not a substance, not a
technology--but a wholly different phase of matter.
As she explains, liquid crystal is a curious material phase that
organizes a substance's molecules in a crystalline form yet allows them
to move fluidly like water. Observed since the nineteenth century, this
phase has been a deep curiosity to science and, in more recent times,
the key to a new era of media technology. In between that time, as
Leslie shows, it has figured in cultural forms from Romantic landscape
painting to snow globes, from mountaineering to eco-disasters, and from
touchscreen devices to DNA. Expertly written but accessible, Liquid
Crystals recounts the unheralded but hugely significant emergence of
this unique form of matter.