A gated ring oscillator based parallel-TDC system with digital resolution enhancement

Author(s):  
Kameswaran Vengattaramane ◽  
Jonathan Borremans ◽  
Michiel Steyaert ◽  
Jan Craninckx
2006 ◽  
Vol 84 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 253-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
I.I. Smolyaninov ◽  
J. Elliott ◽  
G. Wurtz ◽  
A.V. Zayats ◽  
C.C. Davis

Author(s):  
Keryn B. Palmer ◽  
Nathaniel C. Thompson ◽  
Peter S. Spector ◽  
Jérôme Kalifa ◽  
Jason H. T. Bates

2011 ◽  
Vol 70 (3) ◽  
pp. 311-322
Author(s):  
Kameswaran Vengattaramane ◽  
Jonathan Borremans ◽  
Michiel Steyaert ◽  
Jan Craninckx

Author(s):  
J.K. Weiss ◽  
M. Gajdardziska-Josifovska ◽  
M. R. McCartney ◽  
David J. Smith

Interfacial structure is a controlling parameter in the behavior of many materials. Electron microscopy methods are widely used for characterizing such features as interface abruptness and chemical segregation at interfaces. The problem for high resolution microscopy is to establish optimum imaging conditions for extracting this information. We have found that off-axis electron holography can provide useful information for the study of interfaces that is not easily obtained by other techniques.Electron holography permits the recovery of both the amplitude and the phase of the image wave. Recent studies have applied the information obtained from electron holograms to characterizing magnetic and electric fields in materials and also to atomic-scale resolution enhancement. The phase of an electron wave passing through a specimen is shifted by an amount which is proportional to the product of the specimen thickness and the projected electrostatic potential (ignoring magnetic fields and diffraction effects). If atomic-scale variations are ignored, the potential in the specimen is described by the mean inner potential, a bulk property sensitive to both composition and structure. For the study of interfaces, the specimen thickness is assumed to be approximately constant across the interface, so that the phase of the image wave will give a picture of mean inner potential across the interface.


Author(s):  
Mike Bruce ◽  
Rama R. Goruganthu ◽  
Shawn McBride ◽  
David Bethke ◽  
J.M. Chin

Abstract For time resolved hot carrier emission from the backside, an alternate approach is demonstrated termed single point PICA. The single point approach records time resolved emission from an individual transistor using time-correlated-single-photon counting and an avalanche photo-diode. The avalanche photo-diode has a much higher quantum efficiency than micro-channel plate photo-multiplier tube based imaging cameras typically used in earlier approaches. The basic system is described and demonstrated from the backside on a ring oscillator circuit.


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