Education
Zunger received his B.Sc, M.Sc, and Doctor of Philosophy education at Tel Aviv University in Israel and did his post-doctoral training at Northwestern University and (as an International Business Machines Corporation Fellow) at the University of California, Berkeley.
Career
He has authored more than 170 papers in Physical Review Letters and Rapid Communication, has an h-index over 115, number of citations over 66,000. Authored the fifth-most cited paper ever to be published in Physical Review since 1893. Zunger’s research field is the condensed matter theory of real materials.
He developed the first-principles pseudopotentials for the density functional theory (1977), co-developed the momentum-space total-energy method (1978), co-developed what is now the most widely used exchange and correlation energy functional and the self-interaction correction (1981), and developed a novel theoretical method for simultaneous relaxation of atomic positions and charge densities in self-consistent local-density approximation calculations (1983).
Recently, he developed novel methods for calculating the electronic properties of semiconductor quantum nanostructures. These atomistic methods have enabled Zunger and his team to discover a range of many-body effects underlying the fundamental physics of the creation, multiplication, and annihilation of excitons.
The foundational methods he developed in the quantum theory of solids now form an essential integral part of the worldwide activities in the broad field of “First-Principles Theory of Real Solids.” In recent years, Zunger has focused on developing the “Inverse Band Structure” concept, whereby one uses ideas from quantum mechanics as well as genetic algorithms to search for atomic configurations that have a desired target property. Zunger also worked on photovoltaic materials, spontaneous ordering in solids (the subject of Zunger’s 2001 Bardeen Award), and quantum nanostructures.