Temperature-dependent ballistic transport in a channel with length below the scattering-limited mean free path

2012 ◽  
Vol 111 (5) ◽  
pp. 054301 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vijay K. Arora ◽  
Mastura Shafinaz Zainal Abidin ◽  
Michael L. P. Tan ◽  
Munawar A. Riyadi
Nano Letters ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 1643-1649 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hang Zhang ◽  
Xiangwen Chen ◽  
Young-Dahl Jho ◽  
Austin J. Minnich

Nanomaterials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 2361
Author(s):  
John Stearns ◽  
Garret Moddel

Geometric diodes are planar conductors patterned asymmetrically to provide electrical asymmetry, and they have exhibited high-frequency rectification in infrared rectennas. These devices function by ballistic or quasi-ballistic transport in which the transport characteristics are sensitive to the device geometry. Common methods for predicting device performance rely on the assumption of totally ballistic transport and neglect the effects of electron momentum relaxation. We present a particle-in-cell Monte Carlo simulation method that allows the prediction of the current–voltage characteristics of geometric diodes operating quasi-ballistically, with the mean-free-path length shorter than the critical device dimensions. With this simulation method, we analyze a new diode geometry made from graphene that shows an improvement in rectification capability over previous geometries. We find that the current rectification capability of a given geometry is optimized for a specific mean-free-path length, such that arbitrarily large mean-free-path lengths are not desirable. These results present a new avenue for understanding geometric effects in the quasi-ballistic regime and show that the relationship between device dimensions and the carrier mean-free-path length can be adjusted to optimize device performance.


The distribution of temperature along a filament electrically heated in vacuo has been studied in detail in previous papers, both theoretically and experimentally. The investigations are extended in the present paper to the case of a thin-walled tube. The major new factor that appears here is the radiational transfer of energy in the core of the tube, and if one can evaluate the rate of gain in energy by a given annular ring on this account one can readily formulate the differential equation governing the distribution of temperature along the tube. Taking ε to be the emissivity, and hence also the absorptivity , of the surface, and taking the fraction (1 – ε) of the radiation incident on the surface that is not absorbed by it to be specularly reflected, we have calculated the radiational gain by the annular ring per second; the expression consists of two terms, proportional to (dT/dx) 2 and to d 2 T/ d x 2 respectively, and their coefficients point to a temperature-dependent thermal conductivity of the core equal to 16/3σDT 3 (2─ε)/ε. It is as though the conduction is due to the thermal diffusion of the photons, and they had a mean free path equal to the diameter D of the tube, enhanced by a factor (2 – ε )/ε as a result of the specular reflexions, in the same manner in which the ‘coefficient of slip' of the molecules of a rarefied gas in its passage through a narrow tube is enhanced by the specular reflexions of the molecules from the walls of the tube. The expression for the conductivity of the core bears a close analogy to the corresponding expression for other transport phenomena in which the mean free path of the diffusing particle is limited by the dimensions of the medium or of the enclosure, e. g. the thermal conductivity of a hot gas in a narrow tube due to the diffusion of the photons emitted by the molecules, or the thermal conductivity of a dielectric cylinder a t low temperatures due to the diffusion of thermal phonons. Though the differential equation determining the temperature distribution along a tube is more complicated than that for a filament, a practically general solution can be obtained; it is found to be similar to that for the filament, except that the natural length is now considerably greater, and the longitudinal variation of the temperature considerably flatter, than in the filament. The case of a closely wound coil is very similar to that of the tube, except that the conductivity through the material of the walls is now through the wire and hence much smaller than in the tube.


2011 ◽  
Vol 309-310 ◽  
pp. 215-222
Author(s):  
T.V. Zaporozhets ◽  
Andriy Gusak

Rate of SHS (self-propagating high-tеmperature synthesis) reactions in solid nano-sized multilayers is controlled by the time and temperature dependent vacancy concentration. The increase of reaction temperature is typically faster than the rate of vacancy generation. Therefore, the finite relaxation rate of vacancies leads to drastic slowing down of SHS. On the other hand, as-prepared vacancy supersaturation due to fast deposition on the cold substrate may lead to a certain acceleration of SHS. Influence of (1) vacancy mean free path and (2) initial vacancy supersaturation on the SHS rate is investigated numerically. In wide region of parameters the front velocity appears to be inversely proportional to the square root of vacancy mean free path length.


1986 ◽  
Vol 459 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ge Lingxiao ◽  
Zhuo Yizhong ◽  
Wolfgang Nörenberg

1993 ◽  
Vol 3 (7) ◽  
pp. 1649-1659
Author(s):  
Mohammad A. Tafreshi ◽  
Stefan Csillag ◽  
Zou Wei Yuan ◽  
Christian Bohm ◽  
Elisabeth Lefèvre ◽  
...  

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