Stefan Udrea said:
I've read an article written in the 60's by the russian physicist Pavel Kapitza where he was saying that one of the field where physics was less successful was in finding laws to predict the properties of the metalic alloys,and thus the compositions of various alloys is determined by the engineers' intuition and by trial and error.
I wonder, now that we are in 2006, has the situation changed ?
It is always a good idea (in fact, I'm trying to make it a requirement on here), that when you are talking about something you read, that you make an exact citation of the article. This will enable some of us to possibly find it, double-check if you read it correctly, and
then make comments. Without that, it is almost impossible to know what exactly is being talked about.
Having said that, let's first of all established that band structure calculations have been quite sucessfull in "predicting" behavior of a lot of solids. The problem comes in, as has already been exhibited by some alloys, and even some transition metal oxide, when band structure theory fails. You then have materials that exhibit Mott-Hubbard band, Brinkman-Rice model, etc. These are more difficult, and in many instances, it is hard to predict when something will be described by which model. Most are done a priori, i.e. an experimental discovery is made first, then after many studies, we then realize that it is a Mott-Hubbard compound.
Take note that there is almost an unlimited cocktail of metal alloys that can be produced. So with such complexities, you can't really just punch in the ingredients and expect to be able to make an exact prediction on which one is going to be a metal, etc.
However, once we know what it is, i.e. if it is a Mott-Hubbard metal, a band metal, etc., then the rest of its properties is well-known and well-described.
Zz.