76,547 research outputs found
Effect of electron-phonon scattering on shot noise in nanoscale junctions
We investigate the effect of electron-phonon inelastic scattering on shot
noise in nanoscale junctions in the regime of quasi-ballistic transport. We
predict that when the local temperature of the junction is larger than its
lowest vibrational mode energy , the inelastic contribution to shot noise
(conductance) increases (decreases) with bias as (). The
corresponding Fano factor thus increases as . We also show that the
inelastic contribution to the Fano factor saturates with increasing thermal
current exchanged between the junction and the bulk electrodes to a value
which, for , is independent of bias. A measurement of shot noise may
thus provide information about the local temperature and heat dissipation in
nanoscale conductors.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Perturbational approach to the quantum capacity of additive Gaussian quantum channel
For a quantum channel with additive Gaussian quantum noise, at the large
input energy side, we prove that the one shot capacity is achieved by the
thermal noise state for all Gaussian state inputs, it is also true for
non-Gaussian input in the sense of first order perturbation. For a general case
of copies input, we show that up to first order perturbation, any
non-Gaussian perturbation to the product thermal state input has a less quantum
information transmission rate when the input energy tend to infinitive.Comment: 5 page
Inverter-Based Low-Voltage CCII- Design and Its Filter Application
This paper presents a negative type second-generation current conveyor (CCII-). It is based on an inverter-based low-voltage error amplifier, and a negative current mirror. The CCII- could be operated in a very low supply voltage such as ±0.5V. The proposed CCII- has wide input voltage range (±0.24V), wide output voltage (±0.24V) and wide output current range (±24mA). The proposed CCII- has no on-chip capacitors, so it can be designed with standard CMOS digital processes. Moreover, the architecture of the proposed circuit without cascoded MOSFET transistors is easily designed and suitable for low-voltage operation. The proposed CCII- has been fabricated in TSMC 0.18μm CMOS processes and it occupies 1189.91 x 1178.43μm2 (include PADs). It can also be validated by low voltage CCII filters
Perturbation theory of von Neumann Entropy
In quantum information theory, von Neumann entropy plays an important role.
The entropies can be obtained analytically only for a few states. In continuous
variable system, even evaluating entropy numerically is not an easy task since
the dimension is infinite. We develop the perturbation theory systematically
for calculating von Neumann entropy of non-degenerate systems as well as
degenerate systems. The result turns out to be a practical way of the expansion
calculation of von Neumann entropy.Comment: 7 page
Patterned growth of carbon nanotubes on Si substrates without predeposition of metal catalysts
Aligned carbon nanotubes(CNTs) can be readily synthesized on quartz or silicon-oxide-coated Si substrates using a chemical vapor deposition method, but it is difficult to grow them on pure Si substrates without predeposition of metal catalysts. We report that aligned CNTs were grown by pyrolysis of iron phthalocyanine at 1000°C on the templates created on Si substrates with simple mechanical scratching. Scanning electron microscopy and x-ray energy spectroscopy analysis revealed that the trenches and patterns created on the surface of Si substrates were preferred nucleation sites for nanotube growth due to a high surface energy, metastable surface structure, and possible capillarity effect. A two-step pyrolysis process maintained Fe as an active catalyst.This work is supported in part by the
Australian Research Council under Centre of Excellence and
Discovery research projects
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