The site of Dmitry A. Ryndyk

Nonequilibrium Quantum Nanosystems


Quantum Transport  •  Many-body effects  •  Nonequilibrium phenomena at nanoscale  •  Multiscale computational platform
Quantum materials  •  Nanoscale devices  •  Molecular nanosystems


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From quantum materials to nanoscale devices and biosystems


My research interest is focused on development of the theoretical and computational methods for quantum transport at nanosale and application to the following fields.

A) Quantum Materials. Challenging task is calculation of material parameters (mechanical, electrical, thermal, thermoelectrical, magnetic, etc.) from first principles. Especially important is quantum atomistic approach for modeling of new low-dimensional materials (“beyond graphene”).

B) Nanoscale Systems and Devices. New 1-10 nanometer size devices and especially devices based on novel quantum materials, require new computational methods for modeling.

C) Nonequilibrium Molecular Nanosystem. Modern research topics include the real-time modeling of systems in the range from molecular motors to biological systems at microscopic level.

Although the basic physical principles in these fields are well established, one should go far beyond simple models and methods to get relevant results for real systems. On the other hand, it is very promising to have such a “virtual lab” to model new materials and new devices and produce some guides for experiments.

TraNaS OpenSuite is the integrated open software suite for quantum and classical nanoscale modeling.

Contact



Dmitry A. Ryndyk
Dr. rer. nat. habil.
Materials Science and Nanotechnology, TU Dresden
Theoretical Chemistry, TU Dresden
dmitry.ryndyk()tu-dresden.de


News

 
Textbook on Quantum Transport
 
 



www.springer.com/de/book/9783319240862 “Professor Dmitry A. Ryndyk is an expert on quantum transport theory and has taught classes on this subject … . This book has been developed from his course notes and is aimed at being a suitable advanced level textbook for master’s- and PhD-level students … . the book is useful for a graduate-level seminar class on nanoscale quantum transport and for self-study for experts working in this field. For those interested in nanoscale quantum transport, I recommend this book.” (Steven C. Moss, MRS Bulletin, Vol. 42 (1), January, 2017)