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Books > Science & Mathematics > Physics > States of matter > Condensed matter physics (liquids & solids)
Phenomena of Optical Metamaterials provides an overview of
phenomena enabled by artificial and designed metamaterials and
their application for photonic devices. The book explores the study
of active metamaterials with tunable and switchable properties and
novel functionalities, such as the control of spontaneous emission
and enhancement. Topics addressed cover theory, modelling and
design, applications in practical devices, fabrication,
characterization, and measurement, thus helping readers understand
and develop new artificial, functional materials.
Handbook of Natural Polymers, Volume One: Sources, Synthesis, and
Characterization is a comprehensive resource covering extraction
and processing methods for polymers from natural sources, with an
emphasis on the latest advances. Sections cover the current
state-of-the-art, challenges and opportunities in natural polymers.
Following sections cover extraction, synthesis and characterization
methods organized by polymer type. Along with broad chapters
discussing approaches to starch-based and polysaccharide-based
polymers, dedicated chapters offer in-depth information on
nanocellulose, chitin and chitosan, gluten, alginate, natural
rubber, gelatin, pectin, lignin, keratin, gutta percha, shellac,
silk, wood, casein, albumin, collagen, hemicellulose,
polyhydroxyalkanoates, zein, soya protein, and gum. Final chapters
explore other key themes, including filler interactions and
properties in natural polymer-based composites, biocompatibility
and cytotoxicity, and biodegradability, life cycle, and recycling.
Throughout the book, information is supported by data, and guidance
is offered regarding potential scale-up and industry factors.
Molecular Beam Epitaxy (MBE): From Research to Mass Production,
Second Edition, provides a comprehensive overview of the latest MBE
research and applications in epitaxial growth, along with a
detailed discussion and 'how to' on processing molecular or atomic
beams that occur on the surface of a heated crystalline substrate
in a vacuum. The techniques addressed in the book can be deployed
wherever precise thin-film devices with enhanced and unique
properties for computing, optics or photonics are required. It
includes new semiconductor materials, new device structures that
are commercially available, and many that are at the advanced
research stage. This second edition covers the advances made by
MBE, both in research and in the mass production of electronic and
optoelectronic devices. Enhancements include new chapters on MBE
growth of 2D materials, Si-Ge materials, AIN and GaN materials, and
hybrid ferromagnet and semiconductor structures.
Optical second harmonic and sum-frequency generation has evolved
into a useful spectroscopic tool for material characterization,
especially as a viable and powerful technique for probing surfaces
and interfaces. This book serves as an introduction on the
technique. It provides a comprehensible description on the basics
of the technique and gives detailed accounts with illustrating
examples on the wide range of applications of the technique. It
clearly points out the unique capabilities of the technique as a
spectroscopic tool for studies of bulk and interface structures in
different disciplines.This book is an updated version of an earlier
book on the same subject, but it puts more emphasis on physical
concepts and description. It underscores recent advances of
sum-frequency spectroscopy at the technical front as well as over
its wide range of applications, with the author's perspective in
each area. Most chapters end with a section of summary and
prospects that hopefully can help stimulate interest to further
develop the technique and explore possibilities of applying the
technique.
Discontinuous (first-order) phase transitions constitute the most
fundamental and widespread type of structural transitions existing
in Nature, forming a large majority of the transitions found in
elemental crystals, alloys, inorganic compounds, minerals and
complex fluids. Nevertheless, only a small part of them, namely,
weakly discontinuous transformations, were considered by
phenomenological theories, leaving aside the most interesting from
a theoretical point of view and the most important for application
cases. Discontinuous Phase Transitions in Condensed Matter
introduces a density-wave approach to phase transitions which
results in a unified, symmetry-based, model-free theory of the weak
crystallization of molecular mixtures to liquid-crystalline
mesophases, strongly discontinuous crystallization from molten
metals and alloys to conventional, fully segregated crystals, to
aperiodic, quasi-crystalline structures. Assembly of aperiodic
closed virus capsids with non-crystallographic symmetry also falls
into the domain of applicability of the density-wave approach.The
book also considers the applicability domains of the symmetry-based
approach in physics of low-dimensional systems. It includes
comparisons of stability of different surface superstructures and
metal monoatomic coverage structures on the surface of
single-crystalline substrates. The example of the twisted graphene
bilayer demonstrates how parametrization in the spirit of an
advanced phenomenological approach can establish
symmetry-controlled, and therefore model-free, links between
geometrical parameters of the twisted bilayer structure and
reconstruction of its Brillouin zone and energy bands.
Solid State Physics provides the latest information on the branch
of physics that is primarily devoted to the study of matter in its
solid phase, especially at the atomic level. This prestigious
serial presents timely and state-of-the-art reviews pertaining to
all aspects of solid state physics.
In the last years there have been great advances in the
applications of topology and differential geometry to problems in
condensed matter physics. Concepts drawn from topology and geometry
have become essential to the understanding of several phenomena in
the area. Physicists have been creative in producing models for
actual physical phenomena which realize mathematically exotic
concepts and new phases have been discovered in condensed matter in
which topology plays a leading role. An important classification
paradigm is the concept of topological order, where the state
characterizing a system does not break any symmetry, but it defines
a topological phase in the sense that certain fundamental
properties change only when the system passes through a quantum
phase transition. The main purpose of this book is to provide a
brief, self-contained introduction to some mathematical ideas and
methods from differential geometry and topology, and to show a few
applications in condensed matter. It conveys to physicists the
basis for many mathematical concepts, avoiding the detailed
formality of most textbooks.
Plants offer some of the most elegant applications of soft matter
principles in Nature. Understanding the interplay between
chemistry, physics, biology, and fluid mechanics is critical to
forecast plant behaviour, which is necessary for agriculture and
disease management. It also provides inspiration for novel
engineering applications. Starting with fundamental concepts around
plant biology, physics of soft matter and viscous fluids, readers
of this book will be given a cross-disciplinary and expert
grounding to the field. The book covers local scale aspects, such
as cell and tissue mechanics, to regional scale matters covering
movement, tropism, roots, through to global scale topics around
fluid transport. Focussed chapters on water stress, networks, and
biomimetics provide the user with a concise and complete
introduction. Edited by internationally recognised leading experts
in this field with contributions from key investigators worldwide,
this book is the first introduction to the subject matter and will
be suitable for both physical and life science readers.
This book, edited by M. A. Ramos and contributed by several reputed
physicists in the field, presents a timely review on
low-temperature thermal and vibrational properties of glasses, and
of disordered solids in general. In 1971, the seminal work of
Zeller and Pohl was published, which triggered this relevant
research field in condensed matter physics. Hence, this book also
commemorates about 50 years of that highlight with a comprehensive,
updated review.In brief, glasses (firstly genuine amorphous solids
but later on followed by different disordered crystals) were found
to universally exhibit low-temperature properties (specific heat,
thermal conductivity, acoustic and dielectric attenuation, etc.)
unexpectedly very similar among them - and very different from
those of their crystalline counterparts.These universal 'anomalies'
of glasses and other disordered solids remain very controversial
topics in condensed matter physics. They have been addressed
exhaustively in this book, through many updated experimental data,
a survey of most relevant models and theories, as well as by
computational simulations.
Magnetic crystals are ideal systems to study the universal
properties of phase transitions, particularly systems with quenched
randomness and frustration. Pure systems with different symmetries
provide the foundation for studies in corresponding systems with
quenched randomness. Because phenomena near phase transitions have
universal properties, results from bulk magnetic crystals provide a
basis for understanding phase transitions in films and
nanoparticles, as well as many non-magnetic materials.This
motivates the subject of this book, which discusses phase
transitions studies in magnetic crystals from the perspective of an
experimentalist who has done extensive work in the field. The
advantage is that many experimental techniques are described in
sufficient detail for a good understanding of the results and their
comparison to theory.
Statistical Thermodynamics of Semiconductor Alloys is the
consideration of thermodynamic properties and characteristics of
crystalline semiconductor alloys by the methods of statistical
thermodynamics. The topics presented in this book make it possible
to solve such problems as calculation of a miscibility gap, a
spinodal decomposition range, a short-range order, deformations of
crystal structure, and description of the order-disorder
transitions. Semiconductor alloys, including doped elemental
semiconductors are the basic materials of solid-state electronics.
Their structural stability and other characteristics are key to
determining the reliability and lifetime of devices, making the
investigation of stability conditions an important part of
semiconductor physics, materials science, and engineering. This
book is a guide to predicting and studying the thermodynamic
properties and characteristics of the basic materials of
solid-state electronics.
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2D Materials
(Hardcover)
Chatchawal Wongchoosuk, Yotsarayuth Seekaew
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R2,554
Discovery Miles 25 540
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Solid State Physics provides the latest information on the branch
of physics that is primarily devoted to the study of matter in its
solid phase, especially at the atomic level. This prestigious
serial presents timely and state-of-the-art reviews pertaining to
all aspects of solid state physics.
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