26,767 research outputs found
Optimization of transistor design including large signal device/circuit interactions at extremely high frequencies (20-100+GHz)
Transistor design for extremely high frequency applications requires consideration of the interaction between the device and the circuit to which it is connected. Traditional analytical transistor models are to approximate at some of these frequencies and may not account for variations of dopants and semiconductor materials (especially some of the newer materials) within the device. Physically based models of device performance are required. These are based on coupled systems of partial differential equations and typically require 20 minutes of Cray computer time for a single AC operating point. A technique is presented to extract parameters from a few partial differential equation solutions for the device to create a nonlinear equivalent circuit model which runs in approximately 1 second of personal computer time. This nonlinear equivalent circuit model accurately replicates the contact current properties of the device as computed by the partial differential solver on which it is based. Using the nonlinear equivalent circuit model of the device, optimization of systems design can be performed based on device/circuit interactions
Lateral diffusive spin transport in layered structures
A one dimensional theory of lateral spin-polarized transport is derived from
the two dimensional flow in the vertical cross section of a stack of
ferromagnetic and paramagnetic layers. This takes into account the influence of
the lead on the lateral current underneath, in contrast to the conventional 1D
modeling by the collinear configuration of lead/channel/lead. Our theory is
convenient and appropriate for the current in plane configuration of an
all-metallic spintronics structure as well as for the planar structure of a
semiconductor with ferromagnetic contacts. For both systems we predict the
optimal contact width for maximal magnetoresistance and propose an electrical
measurement of the spin diffusion length for a wide range of materials.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Transport in superlattices on single layer graphene
We study transport in undoped graphene in the presence of a superlattice
potential both within a simple continuum model and using numerical
tight-binding calculations. The continuum model demonstrates that the
conductivity of the system is primarily impacted by the velocity anisotropy
that the Dirac points of graphene develop due to the potential. For
one-dimensional superlattice potentials, new Dirac points may be generated, and
the resulting conductivities can be approximately described by the anisotropic
conductivities associated with each Dirac point. Tight-binding calculations
demonstrate that this simple model is quantitatively correct for a single Dirac
point, and that it works qualitatively when there are multiple Dirac points.
Remarkably, for a two dimensional potential which may be very strong but
introduces no anisotropy in the Dirac point, the conductivity of the system
remains essentially the same as when no external potential is present.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Different steady states for spin currents in noncollinear multilayers
We find there are at least two different steady states for transport across
noncollinear magnetic multilayers. In the conventional one there is a
discontinuity in the spin current across the interfaces which has been
identified as the source of current induced magnetic reversal; in the one
advocated herein the spin torque arises from the spin accumulation transverse
to the magnetization of a magnetic layer. These two states have quite different
attributes which should be discerned by current experiments.Comment: 8 pages, no figure. Accepted for publication in Journal of Physics:
Condensed Matte
An experimental and computational investigation of the flow field about a transonic airfoil in supercritical flow with turbulent boundary-layer separation
A combined experimental and computational research program is described for testing and guiding turbulence modeling within regions of separation induced by shock waves incident in turbulent boundary layers. Specifically, studies are made of the separated flow the rear portion of an 18%-thick circular-arc airfoil at zero angle of attack in high Reynolds number supercritical flow. The measurements include distributions of surface static pressure and local skin friction. The instruments employed include highfrequency response pressure cells and a large array of surface hot-wire skin-friction gages. Computations at the experimental flow conditions are made using time-dependent solutions of ensemble-averaged Navier-Stokes equations, plus additional equations for the turbulence modeling
Dynamics of quasiparticle trapping in Andreev levels
We present a theory describing the trapping and untrapping of quasiparticles
in the Andreev bound level of a single-channel weak link between two
superconductors. We calculate the rates of the transitions between even and odd
occupations of the Andreev level induced by absorption and emission of both
photons and phonons. We apply the theory to a recent experiment [Phys. Rev.
Lett. 106, 257003 (2011)] in which the dynamics of the trapping of
quasiparticles in the Andreev levels of superconducting atomic contacts coupled
to a Josephson junction was measured. We show that the plasma energy
of the Josephson junction defines a rather abrupt transition between a fast
relaxation regime dominated by coupling to photons and a slow relaxation regime
dominated by coupling to phonons. With realistic parameters the theory provides
a semi-quantitative description of the experimental results.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review
Signaling local non-credibility in an automatic segmentation pipeline
The advancing technology for automatic segmentation of medical images should be accompanied by techniques to inform the user of the local credibility of results. To the extent that this technology produces clinically acceptable segmentations for a significant fraction of cases, there is a risk that the clinician will assume every result is acceptable. In the less frequent case where segmentation fails, we are concerned that unless the user is alerted by the computer, she would still put the result to clinical use. By alerting the user to the location of a likely segmentation failure, we allow her to apply limited validation and editing resources where they are most needed. We propose an automated method to signal suspected non-credible regions of the segmentation, triggered by statistical outliers of the local image match function. We apply this test to m-rep segmentations of the bladder and prostate in CT images using a local image match computed by PCA on regional intensity quantile functions. We validate these results by correlating the non-credible regions with regions that have surface distance greater than 5.5mm to a reference segmentation for the bladder. A 6mm surface distance was used to validate the prostate results. Varying the outlier threshold level produced a receiver operating characteristic with area under the curve of 0.89 for the bladder and 0.92 for the prostate. Based on this preliminary result, our method has been able to predict local segmentation failures and shows potential for validation in an automatic segmentation pipeline
Focusing of Intense Subpicosecond Laser Pulses in Wedge Targets
Two dimensional particle-in-cell simulations characterizing the interaction
of ultraintense short pulse lasers in the range 10^{18} \leq I \leq 10^{20}
W/cm^{2} with converging target geometries are presented. Seeking to examine
intensity amplification in high-power laser systems, where focal spots are
typically non-diffraction limited, we describe key dynamical features as the
injected laser intensity and convergence angle of the target are systematically
varied. We find that laser pulses are focused down to a wavelength with the
peak intensity amplified by an order of magnitude beyond its vacuum value, and
develop a simple model for how the peak location moves back towards the
injection plane over time. This performance is sustained over hundreds of
femtoseconds and scales to laser intensities beyond 10^{20} W/cm^{2} at 1 \mu m
wavelength.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Physics of Plasma
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