Two-Dimensional Materials in Nanophotonics Two-Dimensional Materials in Nanophotonics

Two-Dimensional Materials in Nanophotonics

Developments, Devices, and Applications

    • $149.99
    • $149.99

Publisher Description

Two-dimensional (2D) materials have attracted tremendous interest since the study of graphene in the early 21st century. With their thickness in the angstrom-to-nanometer range, 2D materials, including graphene, transition metal dichalcogenides, phosphorene, silicene, and other inorganic and organic materials, can be an ideal platform to study fundamental many-body interactions because of reduced screening and can also be further engineered for nanophotonic applications.

This book compiles research outcomes of leading groups in the field of 2D materials for nanophotonic physics and devices. It describes research advances of 2D materials for various nanophotonic applications, including ultrafast lasers, atomically thin optical lenses, and gratings to inelastically manipulate light propagation, their integrations with photonic nanostructures, and light–matter interactions. The book focuses on actual applications, while digging into the physics underneath. It targets advanced undergraduate- and graduate-level students of nanotechnology and researchers in nanotechnology, physics, and chemistry, especially those with an interest in 2D materials.

GENRE
Computers & Internet
RELEASED
2019
October 31
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
282
Pages
PUBLISHER
Jenny Stanford Publishing
SELLER
Taylor & Francis Group
SIZE
8.3
MB

More Books Like This

Developments in Data Storage Developments in Data Storage
2011
Quantum Communication and Quantum Networking Quantum Communication and Quantum Networking
2010
Mechanical Properties of Nanostructured Materials Mechanical Properties of Nanostructured Materials
2016
Recent Progress in Computational Sciences and Engineering (2 vols) Recent Progress in Computational Sciences and Engineering (2 vols)
2019
Optical Supercomputing Optical Supercomputing
2009
Field-Coupled Nanocomputing Field-Coupled Nanocomputing
2014