154 research outputs found
Giant Oscillations of Acoustoelectric Current in a Quantum Channel
A theory of d.c. electric current induced in a quantum channel by a
propagating surface acoustic wave (acoustoelectric current) is worked out. The
first observation of the acoustoelectric current in such a situation was
reported by J. M. Shilton et al., Journ. Phys. C (to be published). The authors
observed a very specific behavior of the acoustoelectric current in a
quasi-one-dimensional channel defined in a GaAs-AlGaAs heterostructure by a
split-gate depletion -- giant oscillations as a function of the gate voltage.
Such a behavior was qualitatively explained by an interplay between the
energy-momentum conservation law for the electrons in the upper transverse mode
with a finite temperature splitting of the Fermi level. In the present paper, a
more detailed theory is developed, and important limiting cases are considered.Comment: 7 pages, 2 Postscript figures, RevTeX 3.
Acoustoelectric effect in a finite-length ballistic quantum channel
The dc current induced by a coherent surface acoustic wave (SAW) of wave
vector q in a ballistic channel of length L is calculated. The current contains
two contributions, even and odd in q. The even current exists only in a
asymmetric channel, when the electron reflection coefficients r_1 and r_2 at
both channel ends are different. The direction of the even current does not
depend on the direction of the SAW propagation, but is reversed upon
interchanging r_1 and r_2. The direction of the odd current is correlated with
the direction of the SAW propagation, but is insensitive to the interchange of
r_1 and r_2. It is shown that both contributions to the current are non zero
only when the electron reflection coefficients at the channel ends are energy
dependent. The current exhibits geometric oscillations as function of qL. These
oscillations are the hallmark of the coherence of the SAW and are completely
washed out when the current is induced by a flux of non-coherent phonons. The
results are compared with those obtained previously by different methods and
under different assumptions.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Acoustoelectric effects in quantum constrictions
A dc current induced in a quantum constriction by a traveling acoustic wave
(or by non-equilibrium ballistic phonons) is considered. We show that in many
important situations the effect is originated from acoustically-induced
scattering between the propagating and reflecting states in the constriction.
Two particular regimes corresponding to relatively high and low acoustic
frequencies are discussed. In the first regime, the acoustoelectric effect in a
smooth constriction can be understood by semi-classical considerations based on
local conservation laws. For the low frequency regime, we show that the
acousto-conductance is closely related to the zero field conductance. The
qualitative considerations are confirmed by numerical calculations both for
smooth and abrupt channels.Comment: 10 pages, RevTeX, 9 postscript figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Non-adiabaticity and single-electron transport driven by surface acoustic waves
Single-electron transport driven by surface acoustic waves (SAW) through a
narrow constriction, formed in two-dimensional electron gas, is studied
theoretically. Due to long-range Coulomb interaction, the tunneling coupling
between the electron gas and the moving minimum of the SAW-induced potential
rapidly decays with time. As a result, nonadiabaticiy sets a limit for the
accuracy of the quantization of acoustoelectric current
Enhanced Bayesian Optimization via Preferential Modeling of Abstract Properties
Experimental (design) optimization is a key driver in designing and
discovering new products and processes. Bayesian Optimization (BO) is an
effective tool for optimizing expensive and black-box experimental design
processes. While Bayesian optimization is a principled data-driven approach to
experimental optimization, it learns everything from scratch and could greatly
benefit from the expertise of its human (domain) experts who often reason about
systems at different abstraction levels using physical properties that are not
necessarily directly measured (or measurable). In this paper, we propose a
human-AI collaborative Bayesian framework to incorporate expert preferences
about unmeasured abstract properties into the surrogate modeling to further
boost the performance of BO. We provide an efficient strategy that can also
handle any incorrect/misleading expert bias in preferential judgments. We
discuss the convergence behavior of our proposed framework. Our experimental
results involving synthetic functions and real-world datasets show the
superiority of our method against the baselines.Comment: 19 Pages, 6 Figure
Acoustoelectric current and pumping in a ballistic quantum point contact
The acoustoelectric current induced by a surface acoustic wave (SAW) in a
ballistic quantum point contact is considered using a quantum approach. We find
that the current is of the "pumping" type and is not related to drag, i.e. to
the momentum transfer from the wave to the electron gas. At gate voltages
corresponding to the plateaus of the quantized conductance the current is
small. It is peaked at the conductance step voltages. The peak current
oscillates and decays with increasing SAW wavenumber for short wavelengths.
These results contradict previous calculations, based on the classical
Boltzmann equation.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Nonlinear absorption of surface acoustic waves by composite fermions
Absorption of surface acoustic waves by a two-dimensional electron gas in a
perpendicular magnetic field is considered. The structure of such system at the
filling factor close to 1/2 can be understood as a gas of {\em composite
fermions}. It is shown that the absorption at can be strongly
nonlinear, while small deviation form 1/2 will restore the linear absorption.
Study of nonlinear absorption allows one to determine the force acting upon the
composite fermions from the acoustic wave at turning points of their
trajectories.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Europhysics letter
BO-Muse: A human expert and AI teaming framework for accelerated experimental design
In this paper we introduce BO-Muse, a new approach to human-AI teaming for
the optimization of expensive black-box functions. Inspired by the intrinsic
difficulty of extracting expert knowledge and distilling it back into AI models
and by observations of human behavior in real-world experimental design, our
algorithm lets the human expert take the lead in the experimental process. The
human expert can use their domain expertise to its full potential, while the AI
plays the role of a muse, injecting novelty and searching for areas of weakness
to break the human out of over-exploitation induced by cognitive entrenchment.
With mild assumptions, we show that our algorithm converges sub-linearly, at a
rate faster than the AI or human alone. We validate our algorithm using
synthetic data and with human experts performing real-world experiments.Comment: 34 Pages, 7 Figures and 5 Table
New advances in Raman study of polyvinylchloride structure
In this work we investigated Raman spectra of a number of industrial grades of polyvinylchloride powder and films, prepared from solutions in tetrahydrofuran and acetophenone. The number and spectral characteristics of the Raman lines in the spectral regions of the C-Cl stretching vibrations and in the region of the C-H and CH2 stretching vibrations were evaluated
Nonlinear acousto-electric transport in a two-dimensional electron system
We study both theoretically and experimentally the nonlinear interaction
between an intense surface acoustic wave and a two-dimensional electron plasma
in semiconductor-piezocrystal hybrid structures. The experiments on hybrid
systems exhibit strongly nonlinear acousto-electric effects. The plasma turns
into moving electron stripes, the acousto-electric current reaches its maximum,
and the sound absorption strongly decreases. To describe the nonlinear
phenomena, we develop a coupled-amplitude method for a two-dimensional system
in the strongly nonlinear regime of interaction. At low electron densities the
absorption coefficient decreases with increasing sound intensity, whereas at
high electron density the absorption coefficient is not a monotonous function
of the sound intensity. High-harmonic generation coefficients as a function of
the sound intensity have a nontrivial behavior. Theory and experiment are found
to be in a good agreement.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figure
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