Conceptual Foundations of Materials :A Standard Model for Ground- and Excited-State Properties ( Volume 2 )

Publication subTitle :A Standard Model for Ground- and Excited-State Properties

Publication series :Volume 2

Author: Louie   Steven G.;Cohen   Marvin L.  

Publisher: Elsevier Science‎

Publication year: 2006

E-ISBN: 9780080464572

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780444509765

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9780444509765

Subject: O4 Physics;O469 Condensed Matter Physics

Language: ENG

Access to resources Favorite

Disclaimer: Any content in publications that violate the sovereignty, the constitution or regulations of the PRC is not accepted or approved by CNPIEC.

Description

The goal of this Volume "Conceptual Foundations of Materials: A standard model for ground- and excited-state properties" is to present the fundamentals of electronic structure theory that are central to the understanding and prediction of materials phenomena and properties. The emphasis is on foundations and concepts. The Sections are designed to offer a broad and comprehensive perspective of the field. They cover the basic aspects of modern electronic structure approaches and highlight their applications to the structural (ground state, vibrational, dynamic and thermodynamic, etc.) and electronic (spectroscopic, dielectric, magnetic, transport, etc.) properties of real materials including solids, clusters, liquids, and nanostructure materials. This framework also forms a basis for studies of emergent properties arising from low-energy electron correlations and interactions such as the quantum Hall effects, superconductivity, and other cooperative phenomena.

Although some of the basics and models for solids were developed in the early part of the last century by figures such as Bloch, Pauli, Fermi, and Slater, the field of electronic structure theory went through a phenomenal growth during the past two decades, leading to new concepts, understandings, and predictive capabilities for determining the ground- and excited-state properties of real, complex materials from first principles. For example, theory can now be used to predict the existence and properties of mate

The users who browse this book also browse