451 research outputs found
Interactions and superconductivity in heavily doped MoS2
We analyze the microscopic origin and the physical properties of the
superconducting phase recently observed in MoS. We show how the combination
of the valley structure of the conduction band, the density dependence of the
screening of the long range Coulomb interactions, the short range electronic
repulsion, and the relative weakness of the electron-phonon interactions, makes
possible the existence of a phase where the superconducting order parameter has
opposite signs in different valleys, resembling the superconductivity found in
the pnictides and cuprates
Assessment of thermal instabilities and oscillations in multifinger heterojunction bipolar transistors through a harmonic-balance-based CAD-oriented dynamic stability analysis technique
We present a novel analysis of thermal instabilities and oscillations in multifinger heterojunction bipolar transistors (HBTs), based on a harmonic-balance computer-aided-design (CAD)-oriented approach to the dynamic stability assessment. The stability analysis is carried out in time-periodic dynamic conditions by calculating the Floquet multipliers of the limit cycle representing the HBT working point. Such a computation is performed directly in the frequency domain, on the basis of the Jacobian of the harmonic-balance problem yielding the limit cycle. The corresponding stability assessment is rigorous, and the efficient calculation method makes it readily implementable in CAD tools, thus allowing for circuit and device optimization. Results on three- and four-finger layouts are presented, including closed-form oscillation criteria for two-finger device
Spin-Hall Conductivity in Electron-Phonon Coupled Systems
We derive the ac spin-Hall conductivity of
two-dimensional spin-orbit coupled systems interacting with dispersionless
phonons of frequency . For the linear Rashba model we show that the
electron-phonon contribution to the spin-vertex corrections breaks the
universality of at low-frequencies and provides a
non-trivial renormalization of the interband resonance. On the contrary, in a
generalized Rashba model for which the spin-vertex contributions are absent,
the coupling to the phonons enters only through the self-energy, leaving the
low frequency behavior of unaffected by the
electron-phonon interaction.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, version as printe
Dynamic, self consistent electro-thermal simulation of power microwave devices including the effect of surface metallizations
We present an efficient simulation technique to account for the thermal spreading effects of surface metallizations in the self-consistent dynamic electro-thermal analysis of power microwave devices. Electro-thermal self-consistency is achieved by solving the coupled nonlinear system made of a temperature dependent device electrical model, and of an approximate description of the device thermal behavior through a thermal impedance matrix. The numerical solution is pursued in the frequency domain by the Harmonic Balance technique. The approach is applied to the thermal stability analysis of power AlGaAs/GaAs HBTs and the results show that metallizations have a significant impact on the occurrence of the device thermal collapse
Modeling of type-II quantum dot intermediate band solar cells accounting for thermal and optical intersubband transitions
Novel solar cell concepts relying on the use of
nanostructures requires ad hoc device modeling tools able to
cope with carrier transport and charge transfer mechanisms
involving the host bulk material and the quantum confined states.
In this work we apply such approach to study the implication
of intersubband competitive processes in type-II GaSb/GaAs
quantum dots on their application to intermediate band solar
cells
Electron-phonon effects on spin-orbit split bands of two dimensional systems
The electronic self-energy is studied for a two dimensional electron gas
coupled to a spin-orbit Rashba field and interacting with dispersionless
phonons. For the case of a momentum independent electron-phonon coupling
(Holstein model) we solve numerically the self-consistent non-crossing
approximation for the self-energy and calculate the electron mass enhancement
and the spectral properties. We find that, even for nominal weak
electron-phonon interaction, for strong spin-orbit couplings the electrons
behave as effectively strongly coupled to the phonons. We interpret this result
by a topological change of the Fermi surface occurring at sufficiently strong
spin-orbit coupling, which induces a square-root divergence in the electronic
density of states at low energies. We provide results for and for the
density of states of the interacting electrons for several values of the
electron filling and of the spin-orbit interaction.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures. Version as printe
Impact of carrier dynamics on the photovoltaic performance of quantum dot solar cells
The study presents a theoretical investigation of the impact of individual electron and hole dynamics on the photovoltaic characteristics of InAs/GaAs quantum dot solar cells. The analysis is carried out by exploiting a model which includes a detailed description of quantum dots (QD) kinetics within a drift-diffusion formalism. Steady-state and transient simulations show that hole thermal spreading across the closely spaced QD valence band states allows to extract the maximum achievable photocurrent from the QDs; on the other hand, slow hole dynamics turns QDs into efficient traps, impairing the short circuit current despite the extended light harvesting provided by the QDs
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