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Useful Links

Band structure

  • Wien 2k developer website.
  • Band structures of elements a periodic table that shows band structures of all the elements in their solid forms.
  • Kronig-Penney model Applet. This is an alternative approach to finding molecular wave functions. It solves the Schroedinger eigenvalue equation in a periodic, square potential well system.

Crystal structure

  • A nice site with structure information for the perovskite, pyrochlore, rutile & spinel structures ←- NEW
  • Pictures of different lattice types; rotatable. FIXME - good site, but now being revamped, it seems

Semiconductors

Phonons

  • Java applet with interactive features demonstrating acoustic and optic phonon modes of diatomic chain.
  • Dispersion relations and animations of phonon modes in several different crystals. Also surface phonons.

Miscellaneous

  • Webelements is a great periodic table with easy-to-access properties, electron configurations, group and period trends, etc.
  • Lots of materials data at MatWeb
  • Data base of Fermi surfacepictures
  • Principles of Semiconductors is a good web book by Bart Van Zeghbroeck of Univ. Colorado. Google his name and you'll find the link. The Wiki wouldn't let me link to it for reasons I don't understand (I get a “spam blocked” error when I try to enter the link).

Journals

Some links are through the OSU Library Proxy Server; others are direct. Try linking through the OSU Library if you can't read or download journal content.

  • Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics is a new addition to the “Annual Review” Series of journals (also Mat. Sci , Chemistry etc). A good place to find summaries of quickly-developing fields by very respected authors.
  • Nature Materials is a monthly journal devoted to the latest-breaking news on new materials.
  • Nanoletters is a monthly journal specifically addressing physics and chemistry, of nanomaterials and nanodevices.
  • Physical Review Online. Phys. Rev. Lett. usually features articles on hot, new materials, but materials is by no means its focus. Phys. Rev. B is devoted to solid state physics.

Mathematica

Mathematica (by Wolfram) is one of several extremely useful software programs that is useful for simple visualization of functions, computer-aided algebra, and is also a vehicle for very sophisticated programming. I highly recommend you use it for classwork, for research and for fun. As long as you are an OSU student, you are permitted a free copy for use on your own computer. Here is a link to a page I wrote for my PH424 physics class describing how to get access, how to use Wolfram's fantastic documentation and tutorials, and I added a few simple templates.

Here are some Mathematica notebooks that I wrote that are relevant to PH575.

OSU seminars

Not part of the course, but watch these for relevant topics …


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