129 research outputs found
Fourier Response of a Memristor: Generation of High Harmonics with Increasing Weights
We investigate the Fourier transform of the current through a memristor when
the applied-voltage frequency is smaller than the characteristic memristor
frequency, and the memristor shows hysteresis in the current-voltage plane. We
find that when the hysteresis curve is "smooth", the current Fourier transform
has weights at odd and even harmonics that decay rapidly and monotonically with
the order of the harmonic; when the hysteresis curve is "sharp", the Fourier
transform of the current is significantly broader, with non-monotonic weights
at high harmonics. We present a simple model which shows that this qualitative
change in the Fourier spectrum is solely driven by the saturation of
memristance during a voltage cycle, and not independently by various system
parameters such as applied or memristor frequencies, and the non-linear dopant
drift.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Memristor: modulating resistance via electron-ion interactions
poster abstractMemristor β a resistor with memory β is a long-postulated but recently discovered new circuit element that complements the three well-known circuit elements, namely a resistor, a capacitor, and an inductor. It was experimentally realized in a titanium oxide thin film doped with oxygen vacancies. The resistance of a memristor, and memristive system in general, depends on the electrical charge that has flown through it and not just on the voltage applied to it. We use a nonlinear, asymmetric drift model to describe the motion of dopant ions that, in turn, determines the effective resistance of the memristor. This interplay between ionic and electronic transport provides a natural mechanism for memory and switching behavior. We obtain the electrical properties of basic memristive circuits, and show that they exhibit non-exponential current and charge decay, negative differential conductance, and frequency-dependent hysteresis in the current-voltage characteristics. We then present a Lagrangian approach to describe the dynamics of memristive systems and its implications to quantum effects in memristors and other memory elements such as mem-capacitors and mem-inductors
Zero-bias conductance anomaly in bilayer quantum Hall systems
Bilayer quantum Hall system at total filling factor shows a rich
variety of broken symmetry ground states because of the competition between the
interlayer and intralayer Coulomb interactions. When the layers are
sufficiently close, a bilayer system develops spontaneous interlayer
phase-coherence that manifests itself through a spectacular enhancement of the
zero-bias interlayer tunneling conductance. We present a theory of this
tunneling conductance anomaly, and show that the zero-bias conductance is
proportional to the square of the {\it quasiparticle} tunneling amplitude.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure. To appear in the PPHMF-IV conference proceedings.
(For more details, see cond-mat/0103454) New version contains two added
reference
Wigner crystal and bubble phases in graphene in the quantum Hall regime
Graphene, a single free-standing sheet of graphite with honeycomb lattice
structure, is a semimetal with carriers that have linear dispersion. A
consequence of this dispersion is the absence of Wigner crystallization in
graphene, since the kinetic and potential energies both scale identically with
the density of carriers. We study the ground state of graphene in the presence
of a strong magnetic field focusing on states with broken translational
symmetry. Our mean-field calculations show that at integer fillings a uniform
state is preferred, whereas at non-integer filling factors Wigner crystal
states (with broken translational symmetry) have lower energy. We obtain the
phase diagram of the system. We find that it is qualitatively similar to that
of quantum Hall systems in semiconductor heterostructures. Our analysis
predicts that non-uniform states, including Wigner crystal state, will occur in
graphene in the presence of a magnetic field and will lead to anisotropic
transport in high Landau levels.Comment: New references added; 9 pages, 9 figures, (paper with high-resolution
images is available at http://www.physics.iupui.edu/yogesh/graphene.pdf
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