938 research outputs found
Activation Energy of Metastable Amorphous Ge2Sb2Te5 from Room Temperature to Melt
Resistivity of metastable amorphous Ge2Sb2Te5 (GST) measured at device level
show an exponential decline with temperature matching with the steady-state
thin-film resistivity measured at 858 K (melting temperature). This suggests
that the free carrier activation mechanisms form a continuum in a large
temperature scale (300 K - 858 K) and the metastable amorphous phase can be
treated as a super-cooled liquid. The effective activation energy calculated
using the resistivity versus temperature data follow a parabolic behavior, with
a room temperature value of 333 meV, peaking to ~377 meV at ~465 K and reaching
zero at ~930 K, using a reference activation energy of 111 meV (3kBT/2) at
melt. Amorphous GST is expected to behave as a p-type semiconductor at Tmelt ~
858 K and transitions from the semiconducting-liquid phase to the
metallic-liquid phase at ~ 930 K at equilibrium. The simultaneous Seebeck (S)
and resistivity versus temperature measurements of amorphous-fcc mixed-phase
GST thin-films show linear S-T trends that meet S = 0 at 0 K, consistent with
degenerate semiconductors, and the dS/dT and room temperature activation energy
show a linear correlation. The single-crystal fcc is calculated to have dS/dT =
0.153 {\mu}V/K for an activation energy of zero and a Fermi level 0.16 eV below
the valance band edge.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Passive remote sensing of columnar water vapour content above land surfaces. Part I: Theoretical algorithm development - Part II: Comparison of OVID measurements with radiosonde and DIAL measurements
Various efforts are currently being made to develop remote sensing techniques for high accuracy determination of atmospheric columnar water vapour content above land surfaces. Most of those algorithms are based on radiative transfer calcu lations, however, which have to be verified by spectral airborne or satellite measurements. Initial verification of a new algorithm with the aid of airborne spectral data using the spectrometer OVID (Optical Visible and near Infrared Detector), an airborne water vapour DIAL (Differential Absorption Lidar), an airc;raft humicap sensor and radiosonde data is performed dUIing a flight experiment over Southern Germany. This water vapour algorithm is also dedicated to the MERIS (MEdium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer) in strument on board ESA's satellite ENVISAT which will be launched 1999. Spatial water vapour gradients of &120 = 0.1 g/cm2 over a distance of 100 km were resolved by applying the OVID measurements. The error estimation of the absolute value of the retrieved water vapour contents poses· some problems due to insufficient additional temporal and spatial radiosonde data. However, the principal feasibility has been prove
Suppression of thermoelectric Thomson effect in silicon microwires under large electrical bias and implications for phase-change memory devices
We have observed how thermoelectric effects that result in asymmetric melting of silicon wires are suppressed for increasing electric current density (J). The experimental results are investigated using numerical modeling of the self-heating process, which elucidates the relative contributions of the asymmetric thermoelectric Thomson heat (∼J) and symmetric Joule heating (∼J2) that lead to symmetric heating for higher current levels. These results are applied in modeling of the self-heating process in phase-change memory devices. While, phase-change memory devices show a clearly preferred operation polarity due to thermoelectric effects, nearly symmetric operation can be achieved with higher amplitude and shorter current pulses, which can lead to design of improved polarity-invariant memory circuitry. © 2014 AIP Publishing LLC
Rounding corners of nano-square patches for multispectral plasmonic metamaterial absorbers
Multispectral metamaterial absorbers based on metal-insulatormetal nano-square patch resonators are studied here. For a geometry consisting of perfectly nano-square patches and vertical sidewalls, double resonances in the visible regime are observed due to simultaneous excitation of electric and magnetic plasmon modes. Although slightly modifying the sizes of the square patches makes the resonance wavelengths simply shift, rounding corners of the square patches results in emergence of a third resonance due to excitation of the circular cavity modes. Sidewall angle of the patches are also observed to affect the absorption spectra significantly. Peak absorption values for the triple resonance structures are strongly affected as the sidewall angle varies from 90 to 50 degrees. Rounded corners and slanted sidewalls are typical imperfections for lithographically fabricated metamaterial structures. The presented results suggest that imperfections caused during fabrication of the top nanostructures must be taken into account when designing metamaterial absorbers. Furthermore, it is shown that these fabrication imperfections can be exploited for improving resonance properties and bandwidths of metamaterials for various potential applications such as solar energy harvesting, thermal emitters, surface enhanced spectroscopies and photodetection. © 2015 Optical Society of America
Multispectral plasmonic structures using native aluminum oxide and aluminum
We report the use of native aluminum oxide to fabricate periodic metal-insulator-metal resonators with simultaneous resonances in the visible and IR wavelengths. The cavity size is in the order of λ3/25000 in the NIR. © 2017 OSA
All-aluminum hierarchical plasmonic surfaces in the infrared
All-Aluminum metal-insulator-metal resonator structures withmultiple metal-insulator stacks showing resonances in the mid-infrared(MIR) are fabricated. Ultrathin native Al2O3 is used as the insulator layersenabling simple fabrication of the resonator structures. The structures withtwo oxide layers exhibit two distinct resonances in the MIR. Simulation ofthese structures shows confinement of magnetic field to the thicker bottomoxide at the shorter wavelength resonance and to the thinner top oxide at theother resonance. Simulations of higher order hierarchical structures with 3 and 4 oxide layers show multispectral response with precise control of theoxide thicknesses. The studied structures show great potential for IRapplications that require durability and multispectral characteristics. © 2016 Optical Society of America
Structured matrices, continued fractions, and root localization of polynomials
We give a detailed account of various connections between several classes of
objects: Hankel, Hurwitz, Toeplitz, Vandermonde and other structured matrices,
Stietjes and Jacobi-type continued fractions, Cauchy indices, moment problems,
total positivity, and root localization of univariate polynomials. Along with a
survey of many classical facts, we provide a number of new results.Comment: 79 pages; new material added to the Introductio
Memristive behavior in a junctionless flash memory cell
We report charge storage based memristive operation of a junctionless thin film flash memory cell when it is operated as a two terminal device by grounding the gate. Unlike memristors based on nanoionics, the presented device mode, which we refer to as the flashristor mode, potentially allows greater control over the memristive properties, allowing rational design. The mode is demonstrated using a depletion type n-channel ZnO transistor grown by atomic layer deposition (ALD), with HfO2 as the tunnel dielectric, Al2O3 as the control dielectric, and non-stoichiometric silicon nitride as the charge storage layer. The device exhibits the pinched hysteresis of a memristor and in the unoptimized device, Roff/Ron ratios of about 3 are presented with low operating voltages below 5 V. A simplified model predicts Roff/Ron ratios can be improved significantly by adjusting the native threshold voltage of the devices. The repeatability of the resistive switching is excellent and devices exhibit 106s retention time, which can, in principle, be improved by engineering the gate stack and storage layer properties. The flashristor mode can find use in analog information processing applications, such as neuromorphic computing, where well-behaving and highly repeatable memristive properties are desirable. © 2015 AIP Publishing LLC
Ultrathin phase-change coatings on metals for electrothermally tunable colors
Metal surfaces coated with ultrathin lossy dielectrics enable color generation through strong interferences in the visible spectrum. Using a phase-change thin film as the coating layer offers tuning the generated color by crystallization or re-amorphization. Here, we study the optical response of surfaces consisting of thin (5-40 nm) phase-changing Ge2Sb2Te5 (GST) films on metal, primarily Al, layers. A color scale ranging from yellow to red to blue that is obtained using different thicknesses of as-deposited amorphous GST layers turns dim gray upon annealing-induced crystallization of the GST. Moreover, when a relatively thick (>100 nm) and lossless dielectric film is introduced between the GST and Al layers, optical cavity modes are observed, offering a rich color gamut at the expense of the angle independent optical response. Finally, a color pixel structure is proposed for ultrahigh resolution (pixel size: 5 × 5 μm2), non-volatile displays, where the metal layer acting like a mirror is used as a heater element. The electrothermal simulations of such a pixel structure suggest that crystallization and re-amorphization of the GST layer using electrical pulses are possible for electrothermal color tuning. © 2016 Author(s)
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