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This book originates from lectures delivered at the First
International School "Laser-surface interactions for new materials
production: tailoring structure and properties" that was held in
San Servolo Island, Venice (Italy) from 13 to 20 July, 2008 under
the direction of A. Miotello and P. M. Ossi. The purpose of the
School was to provide the students (mainly PhD) with a compreh-
sive overview of basic aspects and applications connected to the
laser-matter interaction both to modify surface properties and to
prepare new materials by pulsed laser deposition (PLD) at the
nanometer scale. The ?eld is re- tively young and grewrapidly in
the last 10 years because of the possibility of
depositingvirtuallyanymaterial,includingmulti-component?lms,preserving
the composition of the ablated target and generally avoiding
post-deposition thermaltreatments.
Inaddition,theexperimentalsetupforPLDiscompatible with in situ
diagnostics of both the plasma and the growing ?lm. The basic
laser-surface interaction mechanisms, possibly in an ambient
atmosphere, either chemically reactive or inert, are a challenge to
sci- tists, while engineers are mostly interested in the
characteristics of the deposited materials and the possibility of
tailoring their properties through an appropriate tuning of the
deposition parameters.
The teaching of solid state physics essentially concerns focusing
on crystals and their properties. We study crystals and their
properties because of the simple and elegant results obtained from
the analysis of a spatially periodic system; this is why the
analysis can be made considering a small set of atoms that
represent the whole system of many particles. In contrast to the
formal neat approach to crystals, the study of str- turally
disordered condensed systems is somewhat complicated and often
leads to relatively imprecise results, not to mention the
experimental and computational e?ort involved. As such, almost all
university textbooks, - cluding the advanced course books, only
brie?y touch on the physics of am- phous systems. In any case, both
the fundamental aspect and the ever wider industrial applications
have given structurally disordered matter a role that should not be
overlooked. The study of amorphous solids and their structure,
stability and properties is a vibrant research branch; it is
di?cult to imagine how any physicist, chemist or engineer who has
to deal with materials could possibly ignore this class of systems.
The author of Disordered Matter - an Introduction uses this course
book
atthePolitecnicoinMilan,Italy.Collectingthematerialforthecourseproved
no mean task, leading him to have to prepare ad hoc didactic
material. The
continualexchangebetweenteacherandstudenthasledtothepresentversion
of the book.
This book originates from lectures delivered at the First
International School "Laser-surface interactions for new materials
production: tailoring structure and properties" that was held in
San Servolo Island, Venice (Italy) from 13 to 20 July, 2008 under
the direction of A. Miotello and P. M. Ossi. The purpose of the
School was to provide the students (mainly PhD) with a compreh-
sive overview of basic aspects and applications connected to the
laser-matter interaction both to modify surface properties and to
prepare new materials by pulsed laser deposition (PLD) at the
nanometer scale. The ?eld is re- tively young and grewrapidly in
the last 10 years because of the possibility of
depositingvirtuallyanymaterial,includingmulti-component?lms,preserving
the composition of the ablated target and generally avoiding
post-deposition thermaltreatments.
Inaddition,theexperimentalsetupforPLDiscompatible with in situ
diagnostics of both the plasma and the growing ?lm. The basic
laser-surface interaction mechanisms, possibly in an ambient
atmosphere, either chemically reactive or inert, are a challenge to
sci- tists, while engineers are mostly interested in the
characteristics of the deposited materials and the possibility of
tailoring their properties through an appropriate tuning of the
deposition parameters.
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