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StatusThe thesis was presented on the 19 June, 2015Approved by NCAA on the 7 October, 2015 Abstract![]() ![]() ThesisCZU 539.21
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Doctor thesis in physics, Chisinau, 2015. Introduction, 4 Chapters, General conclusions and recommendations, 200 References, 140 Pages, 66 Figures, 7 Tables. The results presented in the thesis are published in 33 scientific works.
Domain of study: physics of nanosystems.
Goal and objectives: investigation of phonon processes in graphene (single-, two-, three-layer graphene and twisted graphene) and silicon-based nanostructures (Si nanolayers, Si/Ge superlattices and Si-based modulated nanowires), and search of the methods for targeted control of their phonon properties.
Scientific novelty and originality: a Born – von Karman lattice dynamics model for nanolayers, planar superlattices, cross-section modulated nanowires and multilayer graphene with different atomic stacking was developed; the influence of shell material and cross-section modulation on phonon and electron processes in Si-based nanowires was studied; a theoretical approach for calculation of scattering time of phonons on interfaces of Si/Ge superlattices was developed and the influence of Si/Ge interface quality on phonon and thermal properties of these superlattices was investigated; the influence of different atomic stacking on phonon and thermal processes in multilayer graphene was studied.
Important scientific problem solved: it was demonstrated and investigated theoretically the possibility to control the phonon processes in two-layer graphene by rotation of graphene layers one against another around the axis perpendicular to the graphene plane. Theoretical model of lattice dynamics in rotated (“twisted”) two-layer graphene was developed.
Theoretical importance: were developed theoretical approaches for targeted control of phonon processes in graphene and silicon-based nanostructures. Practical significance: the practical implementation of the obtained theoretical results can lead to fabrication of new classes of nanostructures with specifically desired phonon properties.