8 research outputs found
Thermoelectric Amplification of Phonons in Graphene
Amplification of acoustic phonons due to an external temperature gredient
() in Graphene was studied theoretically. The threshold temperature
gradient at which absorption switches over to amplification
in Graphene was evaluated at various frequencies and temperatures
. For and frequency , . The calculation was done in the regime at . The
dependence of the normalized () on the frequency
and the temperature gradient are evaluated numerically and
presented graphically. The calculated for Graphene is lower
than that obtained for homogeneous semiconductors () , Superlattices , Cylindrical Quantum Wire . This makes Graphene a much better material for thermoelectric
phonon amplifier.Comment: 12 Pages, 6 figure
Thermopower of a 2D electron gas in suspended AlGaAs/GaAs heterostructures
We present thermopower measurements on a high electron mobility
two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) in a thin suspended membrane.We show that
the small dimension of the membrane substantially reduces the thermal
conductivity compared to bulk material so that it is possible to establish a
strong thermal gradient along the 2DEG even at a distance of few micrometers.
We find that the zero-field thermopower is significantly affected by the micro
patterning. In contrast to 2DEGs incorporated in a bulk material, the diffusion
contribution to the thermopower stays dominant up to a temperature of 7 K until
the phonon-drag becomes strong and governs the run of the thermopower. We also
find that the coupling between electrons and phonons in the phonon-drag regime
is due to screened deformation potentials, in contrast to piezoelectric
coupling found with bulk phonons.Comment: 7 page
Missing 2k_F Response for Composite Fermions in Phonon Drag
The response of composite Fermions to large wavevector scattering has been
studied through phonon drag measurements. While the response retains
qualitative features of the electron system at zero magnetic field, notable
discrepancies develop as the system is varied from a half-filled Landau level
by changing density or field. These deviations, which appear to be inconsistent
with the current picture of composite Fermions, are absent if half-filling is
maintained while changing density. There remains, however, a clear deviation
from the temperature dependence anticipated for 2k_F scattering.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Barrier penetration effects on thermopower in semiconductor quantum wells
Finite confinement effects, due to the penetration of the electron wavefunction into the barriers of a square well potential, on the low–temperature acoustic-phonon-limited thermopower (TP) of 2DEG are investigated. The 2DEG is considered to be scattered by acoustic phonons via screened deformation potential and piezoelectric couplings. Incorporating the barrier penetration effects, the dependences of diffusion TP and phonon drag TP on barrier height are studied. An expression for phonon drag TP is obtained. Numerical calculations of temperature dependences of mobility and TP for a 10 nm InN/In xGa1−xN quantum well for different values of x show that the magnitude and behavior of TP are altered. A decrease in the barrier height from 500 meV by a factor of 5, enhances the mobility by 34% and reduces the TP by 58% at 20 K. Results are compared with those of infinite barrier approximation
Stochastic Carrier Dynamics in Semiconductor Superlattices
We explore a new regime of hot carrier dynamics, in which electrons in a superlattice miniband exhibit a unique type of stochastic motion when a magnetic field is tilted at an angle θ to the superlattice axis. Remarkably, the dynamics of a miniband electron in a tilted magnetic field reduce to a one-dimensional simple harmonic oscillator, of angular frequency ω cos θ, where ω is the cyclotron frequency, driven by a time-dependent plane wave whose angular frequency equals the Bloch frequency ω. At bias voltages for which ω=nω cos θ, where n is an integer, the electron orbits change from localised Bloch-like trajectories to unbounded stochastic orbits, which diffuse rapidly through intricate web patterns in phase space. To quantify how these webs affect electron transport, we make drift-diffusion calculations of the current-voltage curves including the effects of space-charge build up. When the magnetic field is tilted, our simulations reveal a large resonant peak, which originates from stochastic delocalisation of the electron orbits. We show that the corresponding quantised eigenstates change discontinuously from a highly localised character when the system is off resonance to a fully delocalised form when the resonance condition is satisfied
Stochastic Carrier Dynamics in Semiconductor Superlattices
We explore a new regime of hot carrier dynamics, in which electrons in a superlattice miniband exhibit a unique type of stochastic motion when a magnetic field is tilted at an angle θ to the superlattice axis. Remarkably, the dynamics of a miniband electron in a tilted magnetic field reduce to a one-dimensional simple harmonic oscillator, of angular frequency ω cos θ, where ω is the cyclotron frequency, driven by a time-dependent plane wave whose angular frequency equals the Bloch frequency ω. At bias voltages for which ω=nω cos θ, where n is an integer, the electron orbits change from localised Bloch-like trajectories to unbounded stochastic orbits, which diffuse rapidly through intricate web patterns in phase space. To quantify how these webs affect electron transport, we make drift-diffusion calculations of the current-voltage curves including the effects of space-charge build up. When the magnetic field is tilted, our simulations reveal a large resonant peak, which originates from stochastic delocalisation of the electron orbits. We show that the corresponding quantised eigenstates change discontinuously from a highly localised character when the system is off resonance to a fully delocalised form when the resonance condition is satisfied