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PHYS 824: Introduction to Nanophysics Wiki


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Course Topics

The course provides a hands-on experience for graduate students in sciences (physics, chemistry) and engineering (electrical, chemical, materials), as well as advanced undergraduates, to analyze electronic structure and transport properties of basic classes of carbon, semiconductor, and magnetic nanostructures explored at the current research frontiers.
  • Nanostructures in equilibrium: electronic structure of graphene and other two-dimensional materials, carbon nanotubes, topological insulators, magnetic multilayers.
  • Nanostructure out of equilibrium: quantum transport effects, such as conductance quantization, signatures of quantum interference in conductance, spin-dependent tunneling, spin and quantum Hall effects, spin torque, I-V curves.
  • Theoretical techniques: semi-empirical tight-binding models, density functional theory (DFT) for first-principles modeling, Landauer-Büttiker scattering formalism, nonequilibrium Green's functions (NEGF), NEGF+DFT techniques.
  • Experimental techniques: scanning tunneling and atomic force microscopy.
  • Applications: nanoelectronics, spintronics, thermoelectrics.

News

  • Final Project is posted and is due on 12/15 as a poster.
  • Starting 10/14, we move to new classrooms, Ewing 210 on TuTh and Colburn 046 on W.

Lecture in Progress

  • Application of NEGF and NEGF+DFT to magnetic tunnel junctions


Wiki Getting Started

Consult User's Guide for information on using the wiki software.