123 research outputs found
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Micromachined chemical jet dispenser
Goal is to develop a multi-channel micromachined chemical fluid jet dispenser that is applicable to prototype tests with biological samples that demonstrate its utility for molecular biology experiments. Objective is to demonstrate a new device capable of ultrasonically ejecting droplets from 10-200 {mu}m diameter capillaries that are arranged in an array that is linear or focused. The device is based on several common fabrication procedures used in MEMS (micro electro mechanical systems) technology: piezoelectric actuators, silicon, etc
Do correlations create an energy gap in electronic bilayers? Critical analysis of different approaches
This paper investigates the effect of correlations in electronic bilayers on
the longitudinal collective mode structure. We employ the dielectric
permeability constructed by means of the classical theory of moments. It is
shown that the neglection of damping processes overestimates the role of
correlations. We conclude that the correct account of damping processes leads
to an absence of an energy gap.Comment: 4 page
Phases in Strongly Coupled Electronic Bilayer Liquids
The strongly correlated liquid state of a bilayer of charged particles has
been studied via the HNC calculation of the two-body functions. We report the
first time emergence of a series of structural phases, identified through the
behavior of the two-body functions.Comment: 5 pages, RevTEX 3.0, 4 ps figures; Submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Quasiparticles in a strongly correlated liquid with the fermion condensate: applications to high-temperature superconductors
A model of a strongly correlated electron liquid based on the fermion
condensation (FC) is extended to high-temperature superconductors. Within our
model, the appearance of FC presents a boundary separating the region of a
strongly interacting electron liquid from the region of a strongly correlated
electron liquid. We study the superconductivity of a strongly correlated liquid
and show that under certain conditions, the superconductivity vanishes at
temperatures , with the superconducting gap being
smoothly transformed into a pseudogap. As the result, the pseudogap occupies
only a part of the Fermi surface. The gapped area shrinks with increasing the
temperature and vanishes at . The single-particle excitation width is
also studied. The quasiparticle dispersion in systems with FC can be
represented by two straight lines characterized by the respective effective
masses and , and intersecting near the binding energy that is
of the order of the superconducting gap. It is argued that this strong change
of the quasiparticle dispersion at the binding can be enhanced in underdoped
samples because of strengthening the FC influence. The FC phase transition in
the presence of the superconductivity is examined, and it is shown that this
phase transition can be considered as kinetic energy driven.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, minor grammatical changes, revised and accepted
by JET
The Quantum Hall Effect in Drag: Inter-layer Friction in Strong Magnetic Fields
We study the Coulomb drag between two spatially separated electron systems in
a strong magnetic field, one of which exhibits the quantum Hall effect. At a
fixed temperature, the drag mimics the behavior of in the quantum
Hall system, in that it is sharply peaked near the transitions between
neighboring plateaux. We assess the impact of critical fluctuations near the
transitions, and find that the low temperature behavior of the drag measures an
exponent that characterizes anomalous low frequency dissipation; the
latter is believed to be present following the work of Chalker.Comment: 13 pages, Revtex 2.0, 1 figure upon request, P-93-11-09
Exchange Instabilities in Semiconductor Double Quantum Well Systems
We consider various exchange-driven electronic instabilities in semiconductor
double-layer systems in the absence of any external magnetic field. We
establish that there is no exchange-driven bilayer to monolayer charge transfer
instability in the double-layer systems. We show that, within the unrestricted
Hartree-Fock approximation, the low density stable phase (even in the absence
of any interlayer tunneling) is a quantum ``pseudospin rotated'' spontaneous
interlayer phase coherent spin-polarized symmetric state rather than the
classical Ising-like charge-transfer phase. The U(1) symmetry of the double
quantum well system is broken spontaneously at this low density quantum phase
transition, and the layer density develops quantum fluctuations even in the
absence of any interlayer tunneling. The phase diagram for the double quantum
well system is calculated in the carrier density--layer separation space, and
the possibility of experimentally observing various quantum phases is
discussed. The situation in the presence of an external electric field is
investigated in some detail using the
spin-polarized-local-density-approximation-based self-consistent technique and
good agreement with existing experimental results is obtained.Comment: 24 pages, figures included. Also available at
http://www-cmg.physics.umd.edu/~lzheng/preprint/ct.uu/ . Revised final
version to appear in PR
Al0.2Ga0.8As X-ray photodiodes for X-ray spectroscopy
Three custom-made Al0.2Ga0.8As p-i-n mesa X-ray photodiodes (200 µm diameter, 3 µm i layer) were electrically characterised and investigated for their response to illumination with soft X-rays from an 55Fe radioisotope X-ray source (Mn Kα = 5.9 keV; Mn Kβ = 6.49 keV). The AlGaAs photodiodes were shown to be suitable for photon counting X-ray spectroscopy at room temperature. When coupled to a custom-made low-noise charge-sensitive preamplifier, a mean energy resolution (as quantified by the full width at half maximum of the 5.9 keV photopeak) of 1.24 keV was measured at room temperature. Parameters such as the depletion width (1.92 µm at 10 V), charge trapping noise (61.7 e− rms ENC at 5 V, negligible at 10 V) and the electronic noise components (known dielectric noise (63.4 e− rms), series white noise (27.7 e− rms), parallel white noise (9.5 e− rms) and 1/f series noise (2.2 e− rms) at 10 V reverse bias) affecting the achieved energy resolution were computed. The estimated charge trapping noise and mean energy resolution were compared to similar materials (e.g. Al0.8Ga0.2As) previously reported, and discussed. These results are the first demonstration of photon counting X-ray spectroscopy with Al0.2Ga0.8As reported to date
Frictional drag between quantum wells mediated by phonon exchange
We use the Kubo formalism to evaluate the contribution of acoustic phonon
exchange to the frictional drag between nearby two-dimensional electron
systems. In the case of free phonons, we find a divergent drag rate
(). However, becomes finite when phonon
scattering from either lattice imperfections or electronic excitations is
accounted for. In the case of GaAs quantum wells, we find that for a phonon
mean free path smaller than a critical value, imperfection
scattering dominates and the drag rate varies as over many
orders of magnitude of the layer separation . When exceeds the
critical value, the drag rate is dominated by coupling through an
electron-phonon collective mode localized in the vicinity of the electron
layers. We argue that the coupled electron-phonon mode may be observable for
realistic parameters. Our theory is in good agreement with experimental results
for the temperature, density, and -dependence of the drag rate.Comment: 45 pages, LaTeX, 8 postscript file figure
Collective Modes in Strongly Coupled Elecronic Bilayer Liquids
We present the first reliable calculation of the collective mode structure of
a strongly coupled electronic bilayer. The calculation is based on a classical
model through the frequency-moment-sum-rule preserving Quasi Localized
Charge Approximation, using the recently calculated Hypernetted Chain pair
correlation functions. The spectrum shows an energy gap at and the
absence of a previously conjectured dynamical instability.Comment: 4 pages, 4 .ps figure
Variational quantum Monte Carlo study of two-dimensional Wigner crystals: exchange, correlation, and magnetic field effects
The two-dimensional Wigner crystals are studied with the variational quantum
Monte Carlo method. The close relationship between the ground-state
wavefunction and the collective excitations in the system is illustrated, and
used to guide the construction of the ground-state wavefunction of the strongly
correlated solid. Exchange, correlation, and magnetic field effects all give
rise to distinct physical phenomena. In the absence of any external magnetic
field, interesting spin-orderings are observed in the ground-state of the
electron crystal in various two-dimensional lattices. In particular,
two-dimensional bipartite lattices are shown not to lead necessarily to an
antiferromagnetic ground-state. In the quantum Hall effect regime, a strong
magnetic field introduces new energy and length scales. The magnetic field
quenches the kinetic energy and poses constraints on how the electrons may
correlate with each other. Care is taken to ensure the appropriate
translational properties of the wavefunction when the system is in a uniform
magnetic field. We have examined the exchange, intra-Landau-level correlation
as well as Landau-level-mixing effects with various variational wavefunctions.
We also determine their dependences on the experimental parameters such as the
carrier effective mass at a modulation-doped semiconductor heterojunction. Our
results, when combined with some recent calculations for the energy of the
fractional quantum Hall liquid including Landau-level-mixing, show
quantitatively that in going from -doping to -doping in
heterojunction systems, the crossover filling factor from the fractional
quantum Hall liquid to the Wigner crystal changes from filling factor to . This lends strong support to the claim that theComment: LaTex file, 14 figures available from [email protected]
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