895 research outputs found
Instructional Leadership, Teaching Quality, and Student Achievement: Suggestive Evidence from Three Urban School Districts
Does providing instruction-related professional development to school principals set in motion a chain of events that can improve teaching and learning in their schools? This report examines professional development efforts by the University of Pittsburgh's Institute for Learning in elementary schools in Austin, St. Paul, and New York City
Integrated Academic Planning: Developing an Intentional Path Forward
This presentation will focus on successful completion of Phases 1–3 of an integrated academic planning process, with engagement of 180+ degree programs and four extraordinary education task forces. Presenters will discuss successful and provocative elements, including consensus building, community involvement, data utilization, shared governance, and transparency
Integrated Academic Planning: Developing an Intentional Path Forward
This presentation will focus on successful completion of Phases 1–3 of an integrated academic planning process, with engagement of 180+ degree programs and four extraordinary education task forces. Presenters will discuss successful and provocative elements, including consensus building, community involvement, data utilization, shared governance, and transparency
Using Atom-Probe Tomography to Understand ZnO∶Al=SiO2=Si Schottky Diodes
We use electronic transport and atom-probe tomography to study ZnO∶Al/SiO[subscript 2]/Si Schottky diodes on lightly doped n- and p-type Si. We vary the carrier concentration in the ZnO∶Al films by 2 orders of magnitude, but the Schottky barrier height remains nearly constant. Atom-probe tomography shows that Al segregates to the interface, so that the ZnO∶Al at the junction is likely to be metallic even when the bulk of the ZnO∶Al film is semiconducting. We hypothesize that the observed Fermi-level pinning is connected to the insulator-metal transition in doped ZnO. This implies that tuning the band alignment at oxide/Si interfaces may be achieved by controlling the transition between localized and extended states in the oxide, thereby changing the orbital hybridization across the interface.United States. Dept. of Energy (EERE Postdoctoral Research Award)United States. Air Force Office of Scientific Research (Contract FA9550-12-1- 0189)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Contract DMR-0952794)United States. Dept. of Energy (Bay Area Photovoltaic Consortium. Contract DE-EE0004946)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Center for Nanoscale Systems. Contract ECS-0335765
Methodology for vetting heavily doped semiconductors for intermediate band photovoltaics: A case study in sulfur-hyperdoped silicon
We present a methodology for estimating the efficiency potential for candidate impurity-band photovoltaic materials from empirical measurements. This methodology employs both Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and low-temperature photoconductivity to calculate a “performance figure of merit” and to determine both the position and bandwidth of the impurity band. We evaluate a candidate impurity-band material, silicon hyperdoped with sulfur; we find that the figure of merit is more than one order of magnitude too low for photovoltaic devices that exceed the thermodynamic efficiency limit for single band gap materials.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Energy, Power, and Adaptive Systems Grant Contract ECCS-1102050)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (United States. Dept. of Energy NSF CA EEC-1041895)Center for Clean Water and Clean Energy at MIT and KFUP
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Enhancing the Infrared Photoresponse of Silicon by Controlling the Fermi Level Location within an Impurity Band
Strong absorption of sub-band gap radiation by an impurity band has recently been demonstrated in silicon supersaturated with chalcogen impurities. However, despite the enhanced absorption in this material, the transformation of infrared radiation into an electrical signal via extrinsic photoconductivity—the critical performance requirement for many optoelectronic applications—has only been reported at low temperature because thermal impurity ionization overwhelms photoionization at room temperature. Here, dopant compensation is used to manipulate the optical and electronic properties and thereby improve the room-temperature infrared photoresponse. Silicon co-doped with boron and sulfur is fabricated using ion implantation and nanosecond pulsed laser melting to achieve supersaturated sulfur concentrations and a matched boron distribution. The location of the Fermi level within the sulfur-induced impurity band is controlled by tuning the acceptor-to-donor ratio, and through this dopant compensation, three orders of magnitude improvement in infrared detection at 1550 nm is demonstrated.Engineering and Applied Science
A model of higher accuracy for the individual haplotyping problem based on weighted SNP fragments and genotype with errors
Motivation: In genetic studies of complex diseases, haplotypes provide more information than genotypes. However, haplotyping is much more difficult than genotyping using biological techniques. Therefore effective computational techniques have been in demand. The individual haplotyping problem is the computational problem of inducing a pair of haplotypes from an individual's aligned SNP fragments. Based on various optimal criteria and including different extra information, many models for the problem have been proposed. Higher accuracy of the models has been an important issue in the study of haplotype reconstruction
Deactivation of metastable single-crystal silicon hyperdoped with sulfur
Silicon supersaturated with sulfur by ion implantation and pulsed laser melting exhibits broadband optical absorption of photons with energies less than silicon's band gap. However, this metastable, hyperdoped material loses its ability to absorb sub-band gap light after subsequent thermal treatment. We explore this deactivation process through optical absorption and electronic transport measurements of sulfur-hyperdoped silicon subject to anneals at a range of durations and temperatures. The deactivation process is well described by the Johnson-Mehl-Avrami-Kolmogorov framework for the diffusion-mediated transformation of a metastable supersaturated solid solution, and we find that this transformation is characterized by an apparent activation energy of E[subscript A] = 1.7 ± 0.1 eV. Using this activation energy, the evolution of the optical and electronic properties for all anneal duration-temperature combinations collapse onto distinct curves as a function of the extent of reaction. We provide a mechanistic interpretation of this deactivation based on short-range thermally activated atomic movements of the dopants to form sulfur complexes.Center for Clean Water and Clean Energy at MIT and KFUPMNational Science Foundation (U.S.) (Energy, Power, and Adaptive Systems Grant Contract ECCS-1102050)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (United States. Dept. of Energy Contract EEC-1041895
Picosecond carrier recombination dynamics in chalcogen-hyperdoped silicon
Intermediate-band materials have the potential to be highly efficient solar cells and can be fabricated by incorporating ultrahigh concentrations of deep-level dopants. Direct measurements of the ultrafast carrier recombination processes under supersaturated dopant concentrations have not been previously conducted. Here, we use optical-pump/terahertz-probe measurements to study carrier recombination dynamics of chalcogen-hyperdoped silicon with sub-picosecond resolution. The recombination dynamics is described by two exponential decay time scales: a fast decay time scale ranges between 1 and 200 ps followed by a slow decay on the order of 1 ns. In contrast to the prior theoretical predictions, we find that the carrier lifetime decreases with increasing dopant concentration up to and above the insulator-to-metal transition. Evaluating the material's figure of merit reveals an optimum doping concentration for maximizing performance.Center for Clean Water and Clean Energy at MIT and KFUPMNational Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant Contract ECCS-1102050)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (United States. Dept. of Energy Contract EEC-1041895
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