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mattermaterial

Mattermaterial is a theoretical category describing substances whose macroscopic properties arise from a combination of fundamental matter chemistry and emergent structural organization across scales. The term is used mainly in discussions around advanced metamaterials and quantum materials to stress the interplay between composition and arrangement.

The term is not standardized and appears mainly in speculative or exploratory literature. It denotes engineered

Theoretical work on mattermaterials employs multi-scale frameworks, from first-principles electronic structure to continuum mechanics and effective

Realizations are proposed in programmable metamaterials, correlated-electron systems, and dynamic composites, but there is no universally

Potential applications span sensors, tunable optics, energy devices, and quantum information platforms. The field remains exploratory,

See also metamaterials, quantum materials, programmable matter, adaptive materials.

systems
in
which
response
depends
on
both
the
chemical
constituents
and
the
hierarchical
structure,
often
with
tunability
by
external
stimuli
that
affect
both
matter
and
structure.
medium
theories.
Properties
can
be
nonlinear,
anisotropic,
and
nonlocal,
with
couplings
across
electrical,
optical,
mechanical,
and
thermal
domains.
Synthesis
approaches
include
hierarchical
design,
nanostructuring,
and
incorporation
of
active
or
programmable
elements.
accepted
specimen
or
definition.
with
ongoing
discussions
about
definitions,
standards,
and
practical
limits
of
control
over
both
matter
and
material
structure.