Volume 1 of this work presents theory and methods to study the structure of condensed matter on different time scales. The authors cover the structure analysis by X-ray diffraction methods from crystalline to amorphous materials, from static-relaxed averaged structures to short-lived electronically excited structures, including detailed descriptions of the time-resolved experimental methods. Complementary, an overview of the theoretical description of condensed matter by static and time-dependent density functional theory is given, starting from the fundamental quantities that can be obtained by these methods through to the recent challenges in the description of time dependent phenomena such as optical excitations.
Contents
Static structural analysis of condensed matter: from single-crystal to amorphous
DFT calculations of solids in the ground state
TDDFT, excitations, and spectroscopy
Time-resolved structural analysis: probing condensed matter in motion
Ultrafast science
Table of Contents:
Introduction: From static to femtosecond solid state dynamics
Dominik Schaniel (Nancy, F), Theo Woike (Cologne, D)
Chapter 1: From static towards dynamic structures
Sebastien Pillet (Nancy, F) and Reinhard Neder (Erlangen-Nürnberg, D)
Chapter 2: Ground state and excited state Electrondensity
Claude Lecomte (Nancy, F)
Chapter 3: Solid state dynamics up to femtoseconds
Bruce Patterson (Villigen, CH)
Chapter 4: DFT, TDDFT and molecular dynamics of solids
Karlheinz Schwarz (Vienna, A) and Peter Blaha (Vienna, A)
About the Author :
Theo Woike, Technical University Dresden Germany; Dominik Schaniel, Université de Lorraine, France.
Review :
"The book is well structured and the content of the different chapters sufficiently distinct and complementary. For newcomers in the field, the book offers a highly tutorial introduction to concepts and methods, augmented by a selection of recent prototypical results of research. The combination of theoretical and experimental chapters is convincing and makes use of consistent definitions of physical quantities and mathematical symbols. [...] the book conveys important knowledge to a broad audience and provides a very good introduction to an exciting new field of X-ray science."
Thomas Elsaesser in: Journal of Applied Crystalography 52 (2019), 1-2