Litcius/Paper detail

Perspectives on weak interactions in complex materials at different length scales

Johannes Fiedler, Kristian Berland, James W. Borchert, Robert W. Corkery, Alexander Eisfeld, David Gelbwaser-Klimovsky, Martin Greve, Bodil Holst, Karin Jacobs, Matthias Krüger, Drew F. Parsons, Clas Persson, Martin Presselt, Thomas Reisinger, Stefan Scheel, F. Stienkemeier, Martin Tømterud, Michael Walter, R. Thomas Weitz, Justas Zalieckas

2022Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Nanocomposite materials consist of nanometer-sized quantum objects such as atoms, molecules, voids or nanoparticles embedded in a host material. These quantum objects can be exploited as a super-structure, which can be designed to create material properties targeted for specific applications. For electromagnetism, such targeted properties include field enhancements around the bandgap of a semiconductor used for solar cells, directional decay in topological insulators, high kinetic inductance in superconducting circuits, and many more. Despite very different application areas, all of these properties are united by the common aim of exploiting collective interaction effects between quantum objects. The literature on the topic spreads over very many different disciplines and scientific communities. In this review, we present a cross-disciplinary overview of different approaches for the creation, analysis and theoretical description of nanocomposites with applications related to electromagnetic properties.

Topics & Concepts

van der Waals forceHeterojunctionNanometreNanotechnologyNanocompositeMaterials scienceQuantumChemical physicsPhysicsCondensed matter physicsQuantum mechanicsComposite materialMoleculeCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein CondensatesStrong Light-Matter InteractionsTopological Materials and Phenomena