895 research outputs found
Semiconducting-to-metallic photoconductivity crossover and temperature-dependent Drude weight in graphene
We investigated the transient photoconductivity of graphene at various
gate-tuned carrier densities by optical-pump terahertz-probe spectroscopy. We
demonstrated that graphene exhibits semiconducting positive photoconductivity
near zero carrier density, which crosses over to metallic negative
photoconductivity at high carrier density. Our observations are accounted for
by considering the interplay between photo-induced changes of both the Drude
weight and the carrier scattering rate. Notably, we observed multiple sign
changes in the temporal photoconductivity dynamics at low carrier density. This
behavior reflects the non-monotonic temperature dependence of the Drude weight,
a unique property of massless Dirac fermions
Supply Current Diagnosis in VLSI
This paper presents a technique based upon the power supply current signature (cd) which allows for the testing of mixed-signal systems, in situ. Through experiments with a microprocessor, the cd is shown to contain important information concerning the operational status of the system which may be easily extracted using approaches based on statistical signal detection theory. The fault-detection performance of these techniques is compared to that achieved through auto-regressive modeling of the cd
Optical characterization of BiSe in a magnetic field: infrared evidence for magnetoelectric coupling in a topological insulator material
We present an infrared magneto-optical study of the highly thermoelectric
narrow-gap semiconductor BiSe. Far-infrared and mid-infrared (IR)
reflectance and transmission measurements have been performed in magnetic
fields oriented both parallel and perpendicular to the trigonal axis of
this layered material, and supplemented with UV-visible ellipsometry to obtain
the optical conductivity . With lowering of temperature we
observe narrowing of the Drude conductivity due to reduced quasiparticle
scattering, as well as the increase in the absorption edge due to direct
electronic transitions. Magnetic fields dramatically
renormalize and asymmetrically broaden the strongest far-IR optical phonon,
indicating interaction of the phonon with the continuum free-carrier spectrum
and significant magnetoelectric coupling. For the perpendicular field
orientation, electronic absorption is enhanced, and the plasma edge is slightly
shifted to higher energies. In both cases the direct transition energy is
softened in magnetic field.Comment: Final versio
Dynamical Casimir effect for a massless scalar field between two concentric spherical shells
In this work we consider the dynamical Casimir effect for a massless scalar
field -- under Dirichlet boundary conditions -- between two concentric
spherical shells. We obtain a general expression for the average number of
particle creation, for an arbitrary law of radial motion of the spherical
shells, using two distinct methods: by computing the density operator of the
system and by calculating the Bogoliubov coefficients. We apply our general
expression to breathing modes: when only one of the shells oscillates and when
both shells oscillate in or out of phase. We also analyze the number of
particle production and compare it with the results for the case of plane
geometry.Comment: Final version. To apear in Physical Review
Observation of suppressed terahertz absorption in photoexcited graphene
When light is absorbed by a semiconductor, photoexcited charge carriers enhance the absorption of far-infrared radiation due to intraband transitions. We observe the opposite behavior in monolayer graphene, a zero-gap semiconductor with linear dispersion. By using time domain terahertz (THz) spectroscopy in conjunction with optical pump excitation, we observe a reduced absorption of THz radiation in photoexcited graphene. The measured spectral shape of the differential optical conductivity exhibits non-Drude behavior. We discuss several possible mechanisms that contribute to the observed low-frequency non-equilibrium optical response of graphene.United States. Dept. of Energy. Office of Basic Energy Sciences (Grant DE-SC0006423)National Science Foundation (U.S.). Graduate Research Fellowship ProgramUnited States. Air Force Office of Scientific ResearchUnited States. Office of Naval Research. Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative. Graphene Approaches to Terahertz ElectronicsNational Science Foundation (U.S.) (Award DMR-0819762)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant ECS-0335765
Trion induced negative photoconductivity in monolayer MoS2
Optical excitation typically enhances electrical conduction and low-frequency
radiation absorption in semiconductors. We have, however, observed a pronounced
transient decrease of conductivity in doped monolayer molybdenum disulfide
(MoS2), a two-dimensional (2D) semiconductor, under femtosecond laser
excitation. In particular, the conductivity is reduced dramatically down to
only 30% of its equilibrium value with high pump fluence. This anomalous
phenomenon arises from the strong many-body interactions in the system, where
photoexcited electron-hole pairs join the doping-induced charges to form
trions, bound states of two electrons and one hole. The resultant increase of
the carrier effective mass substantially diminishes the carrier conductivity
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