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Every Molecule Matters 2nd edition [Hardback]

(University of Birmingham, UK)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 300 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 453 g, 2 Line drawings, color; 488 Line drawings, black and white; 2 Illustrations, color; 488 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 20-Aug-2025
  • Izdevniecība: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 1032615524
  • ISBN-13: 9781032615523
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 300 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 453 g, 2 Line drawings, color; 488 Line drawings, black and white; 2 Illustrations, color; 488 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 20-Aug-2025
  • Izdevniecība: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 1032615524
  • ISBN-13: 9781032615523
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Every Molecule Matters is a successor to the authors earlier Every Molecule Tells a Story, and tells the story of a wide range of molecules.

These range from the familiar odours which give pleasure to eating (and the spices that add piquancy) and the vitamins that are vital to our survival, to the way in which insects and plants use chemicals to protect themselves. Theres controversy, with the compounds of chlorine which range from life-supporting anaesthetics and natural antibiotics to insecticides like DDT, which saved innumerable lives but became an environmental cause-celebre. Through the addictive power of nicotine, smoking tobacco morphed from being a curiosity imported from the Americas to a megapound industry that left human illness and death in its wake. And how safe is vaping? Find out about the painkillers that have become drugs of abuse. And smile at the smelly sulphur compounds that are unpleasant human odorants (and defence molecules for skunks), control natural cycles in the environment or act as flavourings to wine. You will discover them all in here.

This book displays the structures of hundreds of compounds, used by humans, animals and plants. Some are beneficial; some are not. Find out here why you should be better informed about them.





This collection of molecules illustrates the relevance of chemistry in our everyday lives. New areas include food chemistry, vitamins, drugs of abuse. New discoveries are reflected in existing chapters. The chemicals are frequently put in context of their human associations, so that the book goes beyond just the chemistry. A celebration of the molecules of chemistry.

Recenzijas

Overview

This compilation is an essential reference work for every chemist particularly organic chemists. It is a handbook of up-to-date knowledge on many of the chemical compounds in our chemical world, and their contexts. Not only is each chapter full of fascinating facts, but each chapter examines the molecules from a different perspective. Here, this reviewer provides commentaries on each of the chapters.

Chapter 1: Food

What differentiates this book from others that cover the topic of food is that, upfront Dr. Cotton discusses the taste of foods: So the core of this chapter is to consider molecules responsible for flavour sensations in a range of foods, both cooked and uncooked . This topic is especially relevant to those who, through chemotherapy, or though viral infections, lose their ability to experience the food sensations.

According to Dr. Cotton, roast beef has been the most studied, the delightful smell (to most carnivores) coming primarily from: methional, 2-acetylthiazole, and 2- acetylthiazolidine, 2-ethyl-3,5-dimethylpyrazine, and 2,3-diethyl-5- methylpyrazine. While fried chicken exudes a completely different array of complex molecules. Eye-opener for this reviewer!

The diversity of odiferous molecules from different cheeses was also fascinating, as were those from the baking process. Vegetarians and vegans need not despair as there are many, many, pages on odours from raw and cooked vegetables and fruit.

Chapter 2: Vitamins

As Dr. Cotton notes in the introduction, vitamins are are an untidy collection of complex organic nutrients. This chapter is built around the discovery of vitamins, particularly through the diseases they prevented. In the descriptions, exceptional care has been taken to accord the correct attributions of discovery and the discovery process. Then follows a detailed discussion of every vitamin and its chemistry.

Chapter 3: Spices, Hot and Cold

After the usual outstanding historical background to the discovery and spread of spices around the world, Dr. Cotton focusses upon their mode of action. This includes very useful facts, including: Much of a capsaicinoid molecule is hydrophobic and so not water-soluble, which is why reaching for the water jug or a beer is not the answer to a curry that is too hot for you; it is thought that milk is the best option, as it contains the lipophilic casein, which is better at removing the lipid-like capsaicins.

Chapter 4: Abused Painkillers and other Drugs of Abuse

This chapter commences with a lengthy and fascinating discourse on the history of opium [ a mixture that involves over 20 different alkaloid molecules] and its wide acceptance: As an over-the-counter cure-all, it was the equivalent of aspirin a century later for many people - but better. It was a painkiller, a sedative and a specific treatment for diarrhoea.

Dr. Cotton has a superlative coverage of fentanyl and its many derivatives. He describes the incredible toxicity of the fentanyl family requiring the wearing of hazmat suits when handling even the smallest dose. He also describes its probable use to break the 2002 siege by Chichen terrorists of 900 people in the Dubrovka Theatre in Moscow, by pumping an aerial suspension into the ventilation system of the Theatre and then treating as many as possible of the hostages with fentanyl antagonists. It is such unusual fact and applications which makes this compilation so interesting.

There is also a lengthy coverage of oxycodone and its relatives, including Krokodil, and many other addictive drugs.

Chapter 5: Nasty Smelling Molecules

What an unusual but very appropriate chapter title for an academic book! It is, of course, a focus upon molecules with high vapour pressure containing nitrogen and/or sulfur atoms. Again, Dr. Cotton surprises the reader by a lengthy and absorbing discourse on truffles: The black truffle produces some 80 volatile molecules, including a lot of aldehydes, ketones and esters. Then, a digression on :the smelliest plant in the world, the titan arum Amorphophallus titanum. It flowers irregularly, every few years, and then just for two or three days. The [ rotten-flesh] smell helps it to attract the kind of insects, which like to feed on decaying flesh - flies and carrion beetles whilst its deep red inflorescence looks like meat. The titan arum and several others that produce the rotting flesh smell owe their odour to mixtures of dimethyl disulphide and dimethyl trisulphide.

Chapter 6: War and Peace in Nature

And what curiosities does the reader find in this chapter? Surely the section on plant defences is the most fascinating. As Dr. Cotton remarks: Plants are at the bottom of the food chain. Though it sounds like confused biology to use the expression, they seem like sitting ducks. Vulnerable, yes, but they have a range of tricks up their sleeves to defend themselves against predators many of which Dr. Cotton describes..

Of course, insects with their mobility, have an amazing array of defensive and offensive options. One of the many amazing examples is: Soldier termites of the Australian species Nasutitermes exitiosus do something even more complicated; they have been described by the authors of the book Secret Weapons as mobile artillery units. They fire their weapon from a gland on their heads, not their abdomens, but again it can be directed, ahead; to the sides; and even behind them.

Chapter 7: Organochlorine Compounds

Dr. Cotton ends this chapter with what might be more appropriate as an opening statement: The world contains an amazing variety of organochlorine compounds some are natural, some wholly synthetic. Some of these compounds are toxic or harmful in other ways, but others are not just useful substances but quite safe into the bargain. Molecules are morally neutral; they do not display their good or bad sides until they come into contact with people. This chapter opens with a lengthy and detailed coverage of the history of DDTs rise and fall. Then amongst other compounds, he describes the large number of the fungal-derived chloro-antibiotics, where they were found and their amazing complex structures.

Chapter 8: Organofluorine Compounds

To begin this chapter, Dr. Cotton discusses in depth how, though fluorine and chlorine are in the same Periodic Table Group, difference in bond energies and electronegativities lead to some very different behaviour and properties in analogous compounds. About half the chapter is consumed by an in-context discussion of chlorofluorocarbons. Then PFOS and its family are covered, followed by fluoro-anesthetics, and fluoro-pharmaceuticals.

Chapter 9: Smoking and Vaping

Opening this chapter is a fascinating detailed of the history of smoking tobacco around the world. As usual, the account is sprinkled with asides that make this book such a fascinating read: But the practice of cigarette smoking did not catch on at once [ in Britain], until the American invention (Virginia, again) of the cigarette making machine in 1880, which chopped cigarettes from a tube of paper-wrapped tobacco, and which could make up to 212 cigarettes per minute. Dr. Cotton then enters the incredibly complex world of vaping, which he tells us at the beginning: A Chinese pharmacist named Hon Lik is often given the credit for inventing the precursor of the modern devices in 2003, as an aid to stopping smoking, after his father died of lung cancer (Spoiler: Hon Lik still smokes).

Chapter 10: Isotopes at Work

Commencing with a review of the history of isotope coverage, Dr. Cotton then reviews some of the isotope relevance of hydrogen, lead, uranium, and others. Of course, we can rely on Dr. Cotton to find some fascinating information which few would know. In this case, the selling of synthetic vanilla as expensive natural vanilla. He explains: Plants make vanillin via a biochemical pathway that results in a higher 13C/12C ratio than that found in synthetic vanillin, . But the counterfeiters got round this by putting vanillin molecules with extra 13C into their fraudulent vanilla extract, so that their vanillin samples matched the natural ratio. Nevertheless, the fake vanilla extract can still be identified, as Dr. Cotton explains: Carbons outside the aromatic ring are easier to introduce; because of this chemical inequivalence between the carbon atoms in the aromatic ring and those carbon atoms that are substituent groups, the distribution of the 13C atoms in faked vanillin is non-uniform, with greater numbers in the aldehyde and methoxy substituent positions.

In summary

This book represents a life-time of accumulated knowledge by Dr. Cotton of chemistry in the real world. This includes many more anecdotes and asides than are selected here. Sprinkled through the chapters are the chemicals structures and many reaction mechanisms. For an organic chemist, these provide a greater depth of comprehension. Should the reader not be so inclined, the text alone is worth the cost of this book. The reader cannot claim to be truly knowledgeable about the chemistry of the world we live in, unless they have read this book and retained it as an ever-ready reference source.

Geoff Rayner-Canham, F.R.S.C., F.C.I.C.

Grenfell Campus, Memorial University Corner Brook, Newfoundland, Canada

In a continuation of Simon Cottons 2012 Every Molecule Tells a Story, his new book, Every Molecule Matters, covers in great detail the story of Food, Vitamins, Hot and Cold, Abused Pain Killers and Other Drugs of Abuse, Nasty Smells, War and Peace, Organochlorine Compounds, Organofluorine Compounds, Smoking and Vaping, Isotopes, and Methane. Each chapter is replete with extensive historical facts, chemical structures and origins, and present day situations. Each chapter has a detailed bibliography at the end of the volume.

The chapter, Spices, Hot and Cold, explains in fascinating detail the chemistry and biology of Capsaicin (Hot) and Menthol (Cold), and the evolution of these chemicals from antiquity to modern times. Also covered are the lesser known Spice Chemicals Nutmeg, Black Pepper, Cinnamon, Szechuan Peppers, and more.

Nasty Smelling Molecules is a fascinating exploration of the chemicals with which every human and animal species is familiar! In addition to the ubiquitous Indole and Hydrogen Sulfide, Cotton presents a myriad of other sulfur compounds from a variety of sources and discusses in detail the origin of the Scent of Death heterocyclic amines.

Abused Painkillers and Other Drugs of Abuse reveals the evolution of the widely abused Heroin, Fentanyl, and Oxycontin, and presents the lesser known Spice and Nitazenes. The extraordinary toxicity of Fentanyl analogues, such as Sufentanil and Carfentanil, is outlined in alarming detail. The Nitazenes came to prominence in 2019 as new analgesics, more potent then morphine, but now recognized to have fatal toxicities comparable to fentanyl.

Vitamins is a marvelous presentation of the myriad vitamins that humans ingest daily. From the connection of scurvy to the lack of Vitamin C, to rickets to the lack of Vitamin D, and pellagra to the absence of Vitamin B3 (niacin), this chapter is a marvelous presentation of the history, sources, and function of all 18 vitamins.

Food is a wonderful summary of food types, from their constituents (protein, lipids, carbohydrates) to both fresh and cooked foods, fruits and vegetables, cheeses, and their myriad aromas. All of this is combined with enough organic chemistry to satisfy the professional (e.g., aroma structures, thermal reactions, oxidation and enzymatic chemistry).

War and Peace in Nature concisely summarizes the extraordinary chemistry utilized by plants and insects in chemical defense against potential predators (man, birds, animals, other insects). These repellent allomones, alarm pheromones, and natural insecticides comprise an array of volatile organic compounds, some of which are well known (benzoquinone, hydrogen peroxide, acetic acid, hydrogen cyanide, volatile aldehydes, phenols) and others such as piperidines, pyrethrins, and the blister beetle cantharidin are new to science. Interestingly, one of these piperidines is a close analogue to the poison hemlock alkaloid that killed Socrates. The well-known plant alkaloids caffeine, cocaine, morphine, and nicotine are toxic to insects. Organic chemistry is limited to the structures of these compounds and some of the fascinating routes to their formation.

Organochlorine Compounds is a chapter dear to me! Ive been following and documenting organochlorine compounds found in nature for the past 45 years. Dr. Cotton concisely presents an account of both man-made and natural organochlorine compounds. From the Civil War anesthetic chloroform and the life-saving vancomycin to the pesticides DDT and Dieldrin, this short chapter succinctly covers this enormous field. A highlight is the sex pheromone 2,6-dichlorophenol produced by species of female ticks. Interestingly, this isomer is essentially impossible to prepare in the laboratory because chlorination of phenol gives the 2,4-isomer! Other relevant examples are the chemical defensive secretion epibatidine, which is a rare chloropyridine, and the soil antibiotic chlorotetracycline. The presentation of organic structures is minimal and appropriate.

Organofluorine Compounds is arguably the most important chapter in the book. It deals with the two current hot topics of CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) and PFAS (polyfluorinated alkyl substances) the former in great detail with respect to the ozone layer and the latter fleetingly. Coverage of CFCs (historical, evolution, chemistry, consequences) is the most detailed and comprehensive that I have ever seen! The rare natural organofluorine and highly toxic compound, fluoroacetic acid, and some fluorinated pharmaceuticals are covered briefly.

Smoking and Vaping. Following an Introduction to the use of tobacco dating back to perhaps 18,000 years ago and certainly used by people in the Andes during 3000-5000 BC, the chapter focusses on the adverse health effects of smoking tobacco. These include formation of the ubiquitous polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and N-nitrosoamines. The section on the relatively new addiction of Vaping (via e-cigarettes) includes the fascinating chemical formation of various toxic compounds (acrolein, other aldehydes) and other compounds from the flavoring additives such as diacetyl (popcorn aroma). Presented also is the surprising generation of higher reactive (and presumed toxic) ketene from Vitamin E acetate. The virtually unknown effects of metals and alcohols, which are present in e-cigarettes, are disclosed. The chapter closes with an illuminating Conclusions and Summary.

Isotopes At Work. In what is an enormous area comprising hundreds of isotopes, Dr. Cotton concentrates this chapter on a few of the most relevant isotopes. Beginning with definitions and familiar examples (heavy water, radioactive vs. non-radioactive, uranium and carbon isotopes), a major attraction of this chapter is the use of isotopes in food fraud, carbon dating, criminology, and forensic science, one case of which analyzed the skeleton of King Richard III. Also presented are Isoscapes, the new study of lighter isotopes.

Methane. The simplest organic molecule is methane (one carbon atom bonded to three hydrogen atoms). In this concise chapter Dr. Cotton presents the astonishing natural occurrences of methane in our universe, and its role in the Greenhouse Effect leading to global warming. No chemistry is explicitly depicted.

Bibliography Dr. Cotton has assembled a Bibliography of nearly 60 pages that covers each book chapter. From book references to primary literature citations, this is a wealth of information for the reader. References include both classic reviews and modern journal citations. Several references to the 2024 literature are listed. For example, the Food chapter lists nearly 170 references. This document alone is worth the price of the book!

Gordon W. Gribble, Professor of Chemistry Emeritus, Department of Chemistry, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA.

Chapter 1 Food

Introduction

Carbohydrates

Polysaccharides

Amino acids and Proteins

Aminoacids

Polypeptides and proteins

Lipids

Taste Sensations

Meat

Cheese

Blue cheeses

Lactose and Camembert

Cheddar

Bread

Baking

Potato

Raw potatoes

Boiled potatoes

Baked potatoes

Potato chips

Mushrooms

Puffball mushrooms

Onions

Fresh onions

Cooked onions

Tomatoes

Strawberries

Wild strawberries

Oranges and lemons

Orange juice and limonene isomer smells

Chapter 2 Vitamins

Introduction

Vitamin A

Vitamin B1, Thiamin

Vitamin B2, Riboflavin

Vitamin B3, Niacin

Vitamin B5, Pantothenic acid

Vitamin B6, Pyridoxine

Vitamin B7, Biotin

Vitamin B9, Folic acid

Vitamin B12, Cobalamin

Vitamin C, L-Ascorbic acid

Vitamin D, Calciferol

Vitamin E

Vitamin K

Chapter 3 Hot and Cold

Introduction

Spices and hot

Capsaicin

The TRPV1 receptor

Black pepper

Ginger

Clove

Nutmeg

Cinnamon

Szechuan peppers

Cool and menthol

How menthol works

Carvone

A new minty molecule

Mustard

Chapter 4 Abused Painkillers and Other Drugs of Abuse

Opium

Morphine

Heroin

Fentanyl

Carfentanil and other powerful fentanyls

Oxycodone and Oxycontin

Krokodil

Spice

Nitazenes

Chapter 5 Nasty Smells

Introduction

Hydrogen sulphide

Dimethylsulfide

Dimethyldisulfide and the titan arum

Thiols

Skunks

Personal hygiene and wines

Trimethylamine

The Smell of the Living and the Dead

The scent of death

Molecules and Mosquitoes

Euglossine bees

Chapter 6 War and Peace

Introduction

Cut grass and green aroma

Plant defence

Weaponised insects

Out of detective novels

Blister beetles

Plants attracting insects

Insect repellents

Chapter 7 Organochlorine Compounds

Introduction

Organic chlorine compounds

Chloromethane

Pesticides and DDT

Dieldrin and Aldrin

Chlorinated medicines

Chlorinated phenols

Natural germ-killers from the earth

Teicoplanin

Chloramphenicol

Halogenated Compounds from Marine Fungi

Another killer

Chapter 8 Organofluorine Compounds

Introduction

CFCs, serendipity and a serious problem

Other organofluorine compounds

Other problematic organofluorine compounds

A natural problem

Fluorinated pharmaceuticals

Anaesthetics

Blood substitutes

Perfluorocubane

Chapter 9 Smoking and Vaping

Smoking

Nicotine

Health effects of smoking

Toxic chemicals in tobacco

Vaping

Metal heating elements and metal pieces

Solvents

Flavourings

Diacetyl

Benzaldehyde, cinnamaldehyde and vanillin

Vitamin E acetate

Nicotine analogues

Student vaping

Conclusions and summary

Chapter 10 Isotopes

Isotopes

Whats the difference between H2O and D2O?

Lead isotopes

Coinage and Isotopes

Uranium isotopes and their separation

Carbon isotopes

Detecting food fraud

Radiocarbon

Fraudulent white truffles

Isoscapes

Carbon in foods

Strontium isotopes

Isotopes and drugs

King Richard III

Isotopes in solving crimes

The Welsh case

The Scissor Sisters case

An unsolved crime .... five thousand years ago.

Chapter 11 Methane

Introduction and historical background

Wood, coal and coal gas

Coal, the environment and smogs

Natural gas and methane.

Methane, a greenhouse gas
Simon Cotton obtained his BSc and PhD in the Chemistry department of Imperial College London, followed by research and teaching appointments at Queen Mary College, London, and the University of East Anglia. He subsequently taught chemistry in both state and independent schools for over 30 years, then in 2011 he became an honorary senior lecturer in Chemistry at the University of Birmingham, where for five years he taught inorganic and organic chemistry. He has published research on the chemistry of iron, cobalt, scandium, yttrium and the lanthanide elements.

His Soundbite Molecules feature ran as a regular column in the magazine Education in Chemistry from 1996 to 2012, reaching every secondary school in the UK. He has written over 100 Molecules of the Month articles, which are featured online at http://www.chm.bris.ac.uk/motm/motm.htm and recognised globally. Additionally, he has delivered over forty Chemistry in Its Element podcasts for the Royal Society of Chemistrys Chemistry World website at http://www.rsc.org/chemistryworld/.

In 2005 he shared the Royal Society of Chemistry Schools Education Award and in 2014 was awarded the British Empire Medal for his work in chemistry and education.

He was editor of Lanthanide and Actinide Compounds for the Dictionary of Organometallic Compounds and the Dictionary of Inorganic Compounds between 1984 and 1997. He wrote the account of lanthanide coordination chemistry for the second edition of Comprehensive Coordination Chemistry and the accounts of lanthanide inorganic and coordination chemistry for the first and second editions of the Encyclopedia of Inorganic Chemistry.

This is his ninth book; his previous books are

D. J. Cardin, S. A. Cotton, M. Green, and J. A. Labinger, Organometallic Compounds of the Lanthanides, Actinides and Early Transition Metals, 1985.

S. A. Cotton, Building The Late Mediaeval Suffolk Parish Church, 2019.

S. A. Cotton, Chemistry of Precious Metals, 1997.

S. A. Cotton, Every Molecule Tells a Story, CRC Press, Boca Raton, Fl., 2012.

S. A. Cotton, Lanthanide and Actinide Chemistry, 2006.

S. A. Cotton, Lanthanides and Actinides, 1991.

P. May and S. A. Cotton, Molecules That Amaze Us, CRC Press, Boca Raton, Fl., 2015.

S. A. Cotton and F. A. Hart, The Heavy Transition Elements, 1975.