17 research outputs found

    Longevity improvement of optically activated, high gain GaAs photoconductive semiconductor switches

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    The longevity of high gain GaAs photoconductive semiconductor switches (PCSS) has been extended to over 100 million pulses at 23A, and over 100 pulses at 1kA. This is achieved by improving the ohmic contacts by doping the semi-insulating GaAs underneath the metal, and by achieving a more uniform distribution of contact wear across the entire switch by distributing the trigger light to form multiple filaments. This paper will compare various approaches to doping the contacts, including ion implantation, thermal diffusion, and epitaxial growth. The device characterization also includes examination of the filament behavior using open-shutter, infra-red imaging during high gain switching. These techniques provide information on the filament carrier densities as well as the influence that the different contact structures and trigger light distributions have on the distribution of the current in the devices. This information is guiding the continuing refinement of contact structures and geometries for further improvements in switch longevity

    Theory of optically-triggered electrical breakdown of semiconductors

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    Abstract: In this paper, we describe a rate equation approach that leads to new insights about electrical breakdown in insulating and semiconducting materials. In this approach, the competition between carrier generation by impact ionization and carrier recombination by Auger and defect recombination leads to steady state solutions for the carrier generation rate, and it is the accessibility of these steady state solutions, for a given electric field, that governs whether breakdown does or does not occur. This approach leads to theoretical definitions for not only the intrinsic breakdown field but also other characteristic quantities. Results obtained for GaAs using a carrier distribution function calculated by both a Maxwellian approximation and an ensemble Monte Carlo method will be discussed

    Enol tautomers of Watson-Crick base pair models are metastable because of nuclear quantum effects

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    Intermolecular enol tautomers of Watson-Crick base pairs could emerge spontaneously via interbase double proton transfer. It has been hypothesized that their formation could be facilitated by thermal fluctuations and proton tunneling, and possibly be relevant to DNA damage. Theoretical and computational studies, assuming classical nuclei, have confirmed the dynamic stability of these rare tautomers. However, by accounting for nuclear quantum effects explicitly through Car-Parrinello path integral molecular dynamics calculations, we find the tautomeric enol form to be dynamically metastable, with lifetimes too insignificant to be implicated in DNA damage
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