521 research outputs found
Vortex-flow electromagnetic emission in stacked intrinsic Josephson junctions
We confirmed the existence of the collective transverse plasma modes excited
by the motion of the Josephson vortex lattice in stacked intrinsic Josephson
junctions of BiSrCaCuO by observing the multiple
subbranches in the Josephson-vortex-flow current-voltage characteristics. We
also observed the symptom of the microwave emission from the resonance between
the Josephson vortex lattice and the collective transverse plasma modes, which
provides the possibility of developing Josephson-vortex-flow electromagnetic
oscillators.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Mobility and Saturation Velocity in Graphene on SiO2
We examine mobility and saturation velocity in graphene on SiO2 above room
temperature (300-500 K) and at high fields (~1 V/um). Data are analyzed with
practical models including gated carriers, thermal generation, "puddle" charge,
and Joule heating. Both mobility and saturation velocity decrease with rising
temperature above 300 K, and with rising carrier density above 2x10^12 cm^-2.
Saturation velocity is >3x10^7 cm/s at low carrier density, and remains greater
than in Si up to 1.2x10^13 cm^-2. Transport appears primarily limited by the
SiO2 substrate, but results suggest intrinsic graphene saturation velocity
could be more than twice that observed here
Heating-compensated constant-temperature tunneling measurements on stacks of BiSrCaCuO intrinsic junctions
In highly anisotropic layered cuprates such as BiSrCaCuO
tunneling measurements on a stack of intrinsic junctions in a high-bias range
are often susceptible to self-heating. In this study we monitored the
temperature variation of a stack ("sample stack") of intrinsic junctions by
measuring the resistance change of a nearby stack ("thermometer stack") of
intrinsic junctions, which was strongly thermal-coupled to the sample stack
through a common Au electrode. We then adopted a
proportional-integral-derivative scheme incorporated with a substrate-holder
heater to compensate the temperature variation. This in-situ temperature
monitoring and controlling technique allows one to get rid of spurious
tunneling effects arising from the self-heating in a high bias range.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
Collective Josephson vortex dynamics in a finite number of intrinsic Josephson junctions
We report the experimental confirmation of the collective transverse plasma
modes excited by the Josephson vortex lattice in stacks of intrinsic Josephson
junctions in BiSrCaCuO single crystals. The
excitation was confirmed by analyzing the temperature () and magnetic field
() dependencies of the multiple sub-branches in the Josephson-vortex-flow
region of the current-voltage characteristics of the system. In the near-static
Josephson vortex state for a low tunneling bias current, pronounced
magnetoresistance oscillations were observed, which represented a
triangular-lattice vortex configuration along the c axis. In the dynamic vortex
state in a sufficiently high magnetic field and for a high bias current,
splitting of a single Josephson vortex-flow branch into multiple sub-branches
was observed. Detailed examination of the sub-branches for varying field
reveals that sub-branches represent the different modes of the Josephson-vortex
lattice along the c axis, with varied configuration from a triangular to a
rectangular lattices. These multiple sub-branches merge to a single curve at a
characteristic temperature, above which no dynamical structural transitions of
the Josephson vortex lattice is expected
Light Emission from Graphene
Graphene has attracted great interest due to its superior and unique physical properties. The strong light‐matter interaction with ultrafast and broadband photoresponse of graphene has allowed for the development of state‐of‐the art optical components, such as photodetectors and optical modulators, making this material very promising for ultrafast optical communications. However, so far, light emission from graphene has remained elusive, although this would open the door towards obtaining atomically thin, flexible and transparent light sources and graphene‐based on‐chip interconnects. In this chapter, we review experimental results and techniques of the electrically driven light emission from graphene in the infrared and visible spectrum range
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