Propagation of electric fields induced by optical phonons in semiconductor heterostructures

2006 ◽  
Vol 100 (2) ◽  
pp. 238-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. D. Rukhlenko ◽  
A. V. Fedorov
Author(s):  
Eric Pop

The electron-phonon energy dissipation bottleneck is examined in silicon and carbon nanoscale devices. Monte Carlo simulations of Joule heating are used to investigate the spectrum of phonon emission in bulk and strained silicon. The generated phonon distributions are highly non-uniform in energy and momentum, although they can be approximately grouped into one third acoustic (AC) and two thirds optical phonons (OP) at high electric fields. The phonon dissipation is markedly different in strained silicon at low electric fields, where certain relaxation mechanisms are blocked by scattering selection rules. In very short (∼10 nm) silicon devices, electron and phonon transport is quasi-ballistic, and the heat generation domain is much displaced from the active device region, into the contact electrodes. The electron-phonon bottleneck is more severe in carbon nanotubes, where the optical phonon energy is three times higher than in silicon, and the electron-OP interaction is entirely dominant at high fields. Thus, persistent hot optical phonons are easily generated under Joule heating in single-walled carbon nanotubes suspended between two electrodes, in vacuum. This leads to negative differential conductance at high bias, light emission, and eventual breakdown. Conversely, optical and electrical measurements on such nanotubes can be used to gauge their thermal properties. The hot optical phonon effects appear less pronounced in suspended nanotubes immersed in an ambient gas, suggesting that phonons find relaxation pathways with the vibrational modes of the ambient gas molecules. Finally, hot optical phonons are least pronounced for carbon nanotube devices lying on dielectrics, where the OP modes can couple into the vibrational modes of the substrate. Such measurements and modeling suggest very interesting, non-equilibrium coupling between electrons and phonons in solid-state devices at nanometer length and picoseconds time scales.


1995 ◽  
Vol 117 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Fushinobu ◽  
A. Majumdar ◽  
K. Hijikata

The reduction of semiconductor device size to the submicrometer range leads to unique electrical and thermal phenomena. The presence of high electric fields (order of 107 V/m) energizes the electrons and throws them far from equilibrium with the lattice. This makes heat generation a nonequilibrium process. For gallium arsenide (GaAs), energy is first transferred from the energized electrons to optical phonons due to strong polar coupling. Since optical phonons do not conduct heat, they must transfer their energy to acoustic phonons for lattice heat conduction. Based on the two-step mechanism with corresponding time scales, a new model is developed to study the process of nonequilibrium heat generation and transport in a GaAs metal semiconductor field effect transistor (MESFET) with a gate length of 0.2 μm. When 3 V is applied to the device, the electron temperature rise is predicted to be more than 1000 K. The effect of lattice heating on electrical characteristics of the device shows that the current is reduced due to decrease in electron mobility. The package thermal conductance is observed to have strong effects on the transient response of the device.


Materials ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (15) ◽  
pp. 2412 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohsen Janipour ◽  
I. Burc Misirlioglu ◽  
Kursat Sendur

Semiconductor heterostructures are suitable for the design and fabrication of terahertz (THz) plasmonic devices, due to their matching carrier densities. The classical dispersion relations in the current literature are derived for metal plasmonic materials, such as gold and silver, for which a homogeneous dielectric function is valid. Penetration of the electric fields into semiconductors induces locally varying charge densities and a spatially varying dielectric function is expected. While such an occurrence renders tunable THz plasmonics a possibility, it is crucial to understand the conditions under which propagating resonant conditions for the carriers occur, upon incidence of an electromagnetic radiation. In this manuscript, we derive a dispersion relation for a p–n heterojunction and apply the methodology to a GaAs p–n junction, a material of interest for optoelectronic devices. Considering symmetrically doped p- and n-type regions with equal width, the effect of certain parameters (such as doping and voltage bias) on the dispersion curve of the p–n heterojunction were investigated. Keeping in sight the different effective masses and mobilities of the carriers, we were able to obtain the conditions that yield identical dielectric functions for the p- and n-regions. Our results indicated that the p–n GaAs system can sustain propagating resonances and can be used as a layered plasmonic waveguide. The conditions under which this is feasible fall in the frequency region between the transverse optical phonon resonance of GaAs and the traditional cut-off frequency of the diode waveguide. In addition, our results indicated when the excitation was slightly above the phonon resonance frequency, the plasmon propagation attained low-loss characteristics. We also showed that the existence or nonexistence of the depletion zone between the p- and n- interfaces allowed certain plasmon modes to propagate, while others decayed rapidly, pointing out the possibility for a design of selective filters.


1987 ◽  
Vol 51 (10) ◽  
pp. 770-772 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul G. Snyder ◽  
Jae E. Oh ◽  
John A. Woollam ◽  
R. E. Owens

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