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At present, there is an increasing interest in the prediction of
properties of classical and new materials such as substitutional
alloys, their surfaces, and metallic or semiconductor multilayers.
A detailed understanding based on a thus of the utmost importance
for fu microscopic, parameter-free approach is ture developments in
solid state physics and materials science. The interrela tion
between electronic and structural properties at surfaces plays a
key role for a microscopic understanding of phenomena as diverse as
catalysis, corrosion, chemisorption and crystal growth. Remarkable
progress has been made in the past 10-15 years in the understand
ing of behavior of ideal crystals and their surfaces by relating
their properties to the underlying electronic structure as
determined from the first principles. Similar studies of complex
systems like imperfect surfaces, interfaces, and mul tilayered
structures seem to be accessible by now. Conventional
band-structure methods, however, are of limited use because they
require an excessive number of atoms per elementary cell, and are
not able to account fully for e.g. substitu tional disorder and the
true semiinfinite geometry of surfaces. Such problems can be solved
more appropriately by Green function techniques and multiple
scattering formalism."
At present, there is an increasing interest in the prediction of
properties of classical and new materials such as substitutional
alloys, their surfaces, and metallic or semiconductor multilayers.
A detailed understanding based on a thus of the utmost importance
for fu microscopic, parameter-free approach is ture developments in
solid state physics and materials science. The interrela tion
between electronic and structural properties at surfaces plays a
key role for a microscopic understanding of phenomena as diverse as
catalysis, corrosion, chemisorption and crystal growth. Remarkable
progress has been made in the past 10-15 years in the understand
ing of behavior of ideal crystals and their surfaces by relating
their properties to the underlying electronic structure as
determined from the first principles. Similar studies of complex
systems like imperfect surfaces, interfaces, and mul tilayered
structures seem to be accessible by now. Conventional
band-structure methods, however, are of limited use because they
require an excessive number of atoms per elementary cell, and are
not able to account fully for e.g. substitu tional disorder and the
true semiinfinite geometry of surfaces. Such problems can be solved
more appropriately by Green function techniques and multiple
scattering formalism.
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