Levi Keller wins Finnish Cultural Foundation award for doctoral studies
Levi Keller from the CEST group is a recipient of a recently announced Finnish Cultural Foundation Award. His doctoral studies harness the increasingly important intersection of computational science and spectroscopy studies to relate experiment to theory. These predictions provide fundamental insight into the structural, chemical and electronic properties of materials.
Spectroscopic experiments, such as x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, allow the observation of addition and removal energies of electrons in materials. Often these observed spectra contain many partially overlapping features and complex satellite structures, and the ability to calculate electron removal and addition energies with numerical accuracy within experimental resolution is critical to their interpretation. The GW approximation to many-body perturbation theory is a proven method to compute these spectral features with high accuracy, but is limited by its high computational expense and poor scaling with system size to systems of at most several hundred atoms. This limitation severely restricts its application, excluding a wide range of real world systems, such as ionic liquids, molecules adsorbed on a surface, or molecular crystals. Embedding approaches circumvent these limitations by combining a less computationally cumbersome description of the key effects of a large and complex environment with a highly accurate description of a focal region in the material of interest.
This grant will be utilized to develop an embedding scheme for the GW approximation. This method will extend the highly accurate quantitative interpretative capability already attained for gas-phase molecules to entirely new classes of extended systems.
Congratulations!
Read more news
Arsi Ikäheimonen’s doctoral research: Smartphone data could reveal early signs of depression
A phone in your pocket, a smart ring on your finger, and an activity tracker on your wrist: everyday devices collect information about their users almost continuously. This data can help monitor and predict symptoms of depression.
Professor Hironori Yoshida: “Machines should adapt to materials, not the other way aroundâ€
Professor of Formgiving believes the future of design lies in embracing irregularity rather than eliminating it. His research combines design, AI and robotics.
President Ilkka Niemelä explains what the new vision for higher education and research means for Finland and Aalto
Aalto has the capability and the will to act as a trailblazer in implementing the vision.