20 research outputs found
Relaxation of Optically Excited Carriers in Graphene
We explore the relaxation of photo-excited graphene by solving a transient
Boltzmann transport equation with electron-phonon (e-ph) and electron-electron
(e-e) scattering. Simulations show that when the excited carriers are relaxed
by e-ph scattering only, a population inversion can be achieved at energies
determined by the photon energy. However, e-e scattering quickly thermalizes
the carrier energy distributions washing out the negative optical conductivity
peaks. The relaxation rates and carrier multiplication effects are presented as
a function of photon energy and dielectric constant.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
On momentum conservation and thermionic emission cooling
The question of whether relaxing momentum conservation can increase the
performance of thermionic cooling device is examined. Both homojunctions and
heterojunctions are considered. It is shown that for many cases, a
non-conserved lateral momentum model overestimates the current. For the case of
heterojunctions with a much heavier effective mass in the barrier and with a
low barrier height, however, non-conservation of lateral momentum may increase
the current. These results may be simply understood from the general principle
that the current is limited by the location, well or barrier, with the smallest
number of conducting channels. These results also show that within thermionic
emission framework, the possibilities of increasing thermionic cooling by
relaxing momentum conservation are limited. More generally, however, when the
connection to the source is weak or in the presence of scattering, the
situation may be different. Issues that deserve further study are identified.Comment: 36 pages, 1 table, 9 figure
Cooling of photoexcited carriers in graphene by internal and substrate phonons
We investigate the energy relaxation of hot carriers produced by
photoexcitation of graphene through coupling to both intrinsic and remote
(substrate) surface polar phonons using the Boltzmann equation approach. We
find that the energy relaxation of hot photocarriers in graphene on commonly
used polar substrates, under most conditions, is dominated by remote surface
polar phonons. We also calculate key characteristics of the energy relaxation
process, such as the transient cooling time and steady state carrier
temperatures and photocarriers densities, which determine the thermoelectric
and photovoltaic photoresponse, respectively. Substrate engineering can be a
promising route to efficient optoelectronic devices driven by hot carrier
dynamics.Comment: related papers at http://tonylow.info
Influence of Dimensionality on Thermoelectric Device Performance
The role of dimensionality on the electronic performance of thermoelectric
devices is clarified using the Landauer formalism, which shows that the
thermoelectric coefficients are related to the transmission, T(E), and how the
conducing channels, M(E), are distributed in energy. The Landauer formalism
applies from the ballistic to diffusive limits and provides a clear way to
compare performance in different dimensions. It also provides a physical
interpretation of the "transport distribution," a quantity that arises in the
Boltzmann transport equation approach. Quantitative comparison of
thermoelectric coefficients in one, two, and three dimension shows that the
channels may be utilized more effectively in lower-dimensions. To realize the
advantage of lower dimensionality, however, the packing density must be very
high, so the thicknesses of the quantum wells or wires must be small. The
potential benefits of engineering M(E) into a delta-function are also
investigated. When compared to a bulk semiconductor, we find the potential for
~50 % improvement in performance. The shape of M(E) improves as dimensionality
decreases, but lower dimensionality itself does not guarantee better
performance because it is controlled by both the shape and the magnitude of
M(E). The benefits of engineering the shape of M(E) appear to be modest, but
approaches to increase the magnitude of M(E) could pay large dividends.Comment: 23 pages, 5 figure
On the Best Bandstructure for Thermoelectric Performance
The conventional understanding that a bandstructure that produces a Dirac
delta function transport distribution (or transmission in the Landauer
framework) maximizes the thermoelectric figure of merit, ZT, is revisited.
Thermoelectric (TE) performance is evaluated using a simple tight binding (TB)
model for electron dispersion and three different scattering models: 1) a
constant scattering time, 2) a constant mean-free-path, and 3) a scattering
rate proportional to the density-of-states. We found that a Dirac
delta-function transmission never produces the maximum ZT. The best
bandstructure for maximizing ZT depends on the scattering physics. These
results demonstrate that the selection of bandstructure to maximize TE
performance is more complex than previously thought and that a high
density-of-states near the band edge does not necessarily improve TE
performance
Gaussian integration with rescaling of abscissas and weights
An algorithm for integration of polynomial functions with variable weight is
considered. It provides extension of the Gaussian integration, with appropriate
scaling of the abscissas and weights. Method is a good alternative to usually
adopted interval splitting.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Spin Torque Generated by Valley Hall Effect in WSe2
Monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides are promising materials for
spintronics due to their robust spin-valley locked valence states, enabling
efficient charge-to-spin conversion via valley Hall effect with non-equilibrium
spins possessing long spin diffusion lengths of hundreds of nanometers. In this
work, we show that the injection of a pure valley current, induced by valley
Hall effect in a WSe2 monolayer, imparts a spin torque on the magnetization of
an overlaid Fe or CoFe in a tunneling structure. The torque efficiency is found
to be comparable to that in conventional perpendicular magnetic tunnel
junctions and can be further optimized with valley Hall angle in WSe2. The
valley nature of the spin torque gives rise to out-of-plane damping-like
torques in a current-in-plane configuration, vanishing charge transport
perpendicular-to-the-plane as well as torque efficiency tunable through gating
On Landauer vs. Boltzmann and Full Band vs. Effective Mass Evaluation of Thermoelectric Transport Coefficients
The Landauer approach to diffusive transport is mathematically related to the
solution of the Boltzmann transport equation, and expressions for the
thermoelectric parameters in both formalisms are presented. Quantum mechanical
and semiclassical techniques to obtain from a full description of the
bandstructure, E(k), the number of conducting channels in the Landauer approach
or the transport distribution in the Boltzmann solution are developed and
compared. Thermoelectric transport coefficients are evaluated from an atomistic
level, full band description of a crystal. Several example calculations for
representative bulk materials are presented, and the full band results are
related to the more common effective mass formalism. Finally, given a full E(k)
for a crystal, a procedure to extract an accurate, effective mass level
description is presented.Comment: 33 pages, 8 figure