2,866 research outputs found
Observation of vacancy-induced suppression of electronic cooling in defected graphene
Previous studies of electron-phonon interaction in impure graphene have found
that static disorder can give rise to an enhancement of electronic cooling. We
investigate the effect of dynamic disorder and observe over an order of
magnitude suppression of electronic cooling compared with clean graphene. The
effect is stronger in graphene with more vacancies, confirming its
vacancy-induced nature. The dependence of the coupling constant on the phonon
temperature implies its link to the dynamics of disorder. Our study highlights
the effect of disorder on electron-phonon interaction in graphene. In addition,
the suppression of electronic cooling holds great promise for improving the
performance of graphene-based bolometer and photo-detector devices.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Power-Rate-Distortion Analysis for Wireless Video Communication under Energy Constraints
Digital Object Identifier 10.1109/TCSVT.2005.846433Mobile devices performing video coding and streaming over wireless and pervasive communication networks are limited in energy supply. To prolong the operational lifetime
of these devices, an embedded video encoding system should be able to adjust its computational complexity and energy consumption as demanded by the situation and its environment. To analyze, control, and optimize the rate-distortion (R-D) behavior of the wireless video communication system under
the energy constraint, we develop a power-rate-distortion (PR-D) analysis framework, which extends the traditional R-D analysis by including another dimension, the power consumption. Specifically, in this paper, we analyze the encoding mechanism of typical video coding systems, and develop a parametric video encoding architecture which is fully scalable in computational complexity. Using dynamic voltage scaling (DVS), an energy consumption management technology recently developed in CMOS circuits design, the complexity scalability can be translated into
the energy consumption scalability of the video encoder. We investigate the R-D behavior of the complexity control parameters and establish an analytic P-R-D model. Both theoretically and experimentally, we show that, using this P-R-D model, the video
coding system is able to automatically adjust its complexity control parameters to match the available energy supply of the mobile device while maximizing the picture quality. The P-RD
model provides a theoretical guideline for system design and performance optimization in mobile video communication under energy constraints
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