MARVEL Distinguished Lecture - Stefano Baroni

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Event details

Date 17.11.2020
Hour 15:0016:15
Speaker Prof. Stefano Baroni, Scuola Internazionale Superiore di Studi Avanzati (SISSA), Trieste, Italy
 
Location
Zoom
Category Conferences - Seminars

   https://epfl.zoom.us/j/82989047900
   Passcode: 3214 

Prof. Stefano Baroni
Professor of theoretical condensed-matter physics at the Scuola Internazionale Superiore di Studi Avanzati (SISSA), Trieste, Italy
 
Gauge invariance of heat and charge transport coefficients
Transport coefficients have been recently shown to be largely independent of the microscopic representation of the current density of the conserved quantity being transported (charge/mass/energy) [1]. This remarkable gauge invariance has been leveraged to lay down a rigorous density-functional theory of heat transport [1], as well as a general approach to it in solids, that nicely bridges the Boltzmann-Peierls kinetic model, which applies to crystals, and the Allen-Feldman one, which applies to glasses [2]. In the case of charge transport, a combination of gauge invariance and Thouless’ quantisation of particle transport [3] allows one to express the electrical conductivity of a stoichiometric ionic conductor in terms of integer-valued, scalar, and time-independent atomic oxidation numbers, instead of real-valued, tensor, and time-dependent Born charges [4]. The departure of non stoichiometric systems from this picture, due to the existence of localised electron pairs, can be fathomed in terms of topological effects on charge transport [5]. In this talk I will review these concepts and report on some key applications of them to liquids and glasses.
[1] A. Marcolongo, P. Umari, and S. Baroni, Nat. Phys. 12, 80 (2016);
[2] L. Isaeva, G. Barbalinardo, D. Donadio, and S. Baroni, Nat. Commun. 10, 3853 (2019);
[3] D.Thouless, Phys. Rev. B, 27, 6083 (1983);
[4] F. Grasselli and S. Baroni, Nat. Phys. 15, 967 (2019);
[5] P. Pegolo, F. Grasselli, and S. Baroni, Phys. Rev. X, in press.

 
About the speaker
Stefano Baroni received his Dottore in Fisica degree from the University of Pisa in 1978. He is currently a full professor of theoretical condensed matter physics at SISSA (Trieste, Italy). Stefano Baroni has authored ≈ 220 scientific publications in peer reviewed scientific journals and conference proceedings, having gathered ≈ 32,000/42,000 citations (Web of Science/Google Scholar) and earning him an H index of 56/64, as of November 2020. His scientific interests are at the frontier between theory and simulation: he likes to invent methods to compute properties and simulate processes previously deemed inaccessible to scientific computation, and to apply them to problems that are scientifically and technologically important. He is largely credited for the introduction of density-functional perturbation theory (DFPT), a methodology that is considered the state of the art for the computation of lattice dynamical properties in solids, including phonon frequencies and lifetimes. He has pioneered O(N) methods in electronic-structure theory and he has also introduced important innovations in quantum stochastic simulations. Recently, he has successfully extended DFPT so as to encompass electronic excited states through time-dependent density-functional and many-body perturbation theories. He has thoroughly applied these methodological innovations to a number of problems in semiconductor physics, the chemical physics of metal surfaces, and, more recently, molecular and magnetic spectroscopies. Over the past 5 years he has given important contributions to the theory and numerical simulation of adiabatic heat and charge transport in liquid and disordered systems.
 
 
Mark your calendars for other upcoming MARVEL Distinguished Lectures:

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    Director of Research at Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR) at the Institute for Superconducting and Innovative materials and Devices (SPIN) in Chieti, Italy
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    Tuesday, December 15, 2020, 15:00 (CET)
     
  • Prof. Jens K. Nørskov
    Professor of physics at the Technical University of Denmark (DTU)
    Catalysis for sustainable production of fuels and chemicals
    Tuesday, January 26, 2021, 15:00 (CET)