MARVEL Distinguished Lecture — Feliciano Giustino
It will take place on Wednesday, December 5, 2018, 16.15 pm, at EPFL, room MXF1.
Abstract
Electron-phonon physics from first principles
Electron-phonon interactions (EPIs) are ubiquitous in condensed matter and materials physics. For example EPIs play a central role in the electrical resistivity of metals, the carrier mobility of semiconductors, the pairing mechanism of conventional superconductors, and the optical properties of indirect-gap materials. More fundamentally, the EPI is the simplest realization of the interaction between fermion and boson fields, arguably one of the pillars of many-particle physics and quantum electrodynamics. The EPI has been studied for almost a century, however only during the last two decades predictive, non-empirical calculations have become possible. In this talk I will outline the theoretical and computational framework underlying modern electron-phonon calculations from first principles, and illustrate recent progress in this area by discussing representative work from our group. In particular I will touch upon our recent investigations of polarons in the angle-resolved photoelectron spectra of transition metal oxides [1,2], the superconducting pairing mechanism in transition metal dichalcogenides [3], non-adiabatic Kohn anomalies in the inelastic X-ray scattering spectra of doped semiconductors [4], and the phonon-induced renormalization of carrier effective masses in halide perovskites [5]. I will conclude by discussing opportunities for future work, and the key challenges for advancing theoretical and computational research on electron-phonon physics [5].
[1] C. Verdi et al., Nat. Commun. 8, 15769 (2017).
[2] J. M. Riley et al., Nat. Commun. 9, 2305 (2018).
[3] C. Heil et al., Phys. Rev. Lett., 119, 087003 (2017).
[4] F. Caruso et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 119, 017001 (2017).
[5] M. Schlipdf et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 121, 086402 (2018).
About the speaker
Feliciano Giustino is Full Professor of Materials at the University of Oxford, and during AY 2017/18 he was the Mary Shepard B. Upson Visiting Professor in Engineering at Cornell University. He holds an MSc in Nuclear Engineering from Politecnico di Torino and a PhD in Physics from the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. Before joining the Department of Materials at Oxford he was a postdoc in the Physics Department of the University of California at Berkeley. He specialises in electronic structure theory and the atomic-scale design of advanced materials for electronics, photonics, and energy. He is author of 120+ research papers and one book on Materials Modelling using Density Functional Theory. He started the open-source software project EPW, which is currently distributed as a core module of the Quantum ESPRESSO materials simulation suite.
Did you miss previous MARVEL Distinguished Lectures? You can watch them on the Materials Cloud dedicated page.
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