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ECE 802-604: Nanoelectronics Prof. Virginia Ayres Electrical & Computer Engineering Michigan State University

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Presentation on theme: "ECE 802-604: Nanoelectronics Prof. Virginia Ayres Electrical & Computer Engineering Michigan State University"— Presentation transcript:

1 ECE 802-604: Nanoelectronics Prof. Virginia Ayres Electrical & Computer Engineering Michigan State University ayresv@msu.edu

2 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 Lecture 05, 12 Sep 13 In Chapter 01 in Datta: Two dimensional electron gas (2-DEG) DEG goes down, mobility goes up Define mobility Proportional to momentum relaxation time  m Count carriers n S available for current – Pr. 1.3 (1-DEG) How n S influences scattering in unexpected ways – Pr 1.1 (2-DEG) One dimensional electron gas (1-DEG) Special Schrödinger eqn (Con E) that accommodates: Electronic confinement: band bending due to space charge Useful external B-field Experimental measure for mobility Examples

3 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 Lecture 05, 12 Sep 13 In Chapter 01 in Datta: Two dimensional electron gas (2-DEG) DEG goes down, mobility goes up Define mobility Proportional to momentum relaxation time  m Count carriers n S available for current – Pr. 1.3 (1-DEG) How n S influences scattering in unexpected ways – Pr 1.1 (2-DEG) Convenient metrics: lengths L m and L  versus dB and L x,y,z One dimensional electron gas (1-DEG) Special Schrödinger eqn (Con E) that accommodates: Electronic confinement: band bending due to space charge Useful external B-field Experimental measure for mobility Examples

4 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 LzLz e-  Travelling wave dB

5 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 e-  Travelling wave dB LzLz dB ~ L z

6 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 Result: e-  Standing wave(s) after initial transient LzLz dB

7 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 e-  Travelling wave dB LzLz If  dB < L z happens due to momentum change e-  Travelling wave. It’s the relative sizes that matter not how small L z is

8 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 dB is proportional to momentum (a vector) Momentum is changed by scattering L m and L  describe how much momentum is likely to change on average in terms of useful length(s)

9 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13

10 Use N(E) to get concentration n S

11 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 Use N(E) to get concentration n S

12 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13

13 Fermi wavenumber k f :

14 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 Characteristic mean free path length L m :

15 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 Corresponding Fermi velocity v f :

16 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 Example: what is the mean free path L m in this HEMT 2-DEG if the momentum relaxation time  m is reduced by a factor of 10? Answer: mean free path is also reduced by a factor of 10 since L m = v f  m.

17 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 Example: what could cause a reduction in the momentum relaxation time  m by a factor of 10? Answer:More scattering due to higher concentration n s More scattering due to more lattice vibrations at higher T Which was it in the preceding example? Answer: it had to be higher T since in the answer the class gave, you kept v f the same and:

18 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 Example: these examples are based on the assumption that the 2-DEG e- gas is degenerate. Prove that it is by locating E f relative to the bottom of the conduction band.

19 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 L  : Phase relaxation length Start with   = the phase relaxation time. Experimental data 1/   vs. T:

20 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 Example: what is the phase relaxation time   for the HEMT whose data is shown in the figure at T = 0.5 K? Answer:

21 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13

22 v f and  m as appropriate for 2-DEG and temperature (“f”  cold)

23 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 Lecture 05, 12 Sep 13 In Chapter 01 in Datta: Two dimensional electron gas (2-DEG) DEG goes down, mobility goes up Define mobility Proportional to momentum relaxation time  m Count carriers n S available for current – Pr. 1.3 (1-DEG) How n S influences scattering in unexpected ways – Pr 1.1 (2-DEG) One dimensional electron gas (1-DEG) Special Schrödinger eqn (Con E) that accommodates: Electronic confinement: band bending due to space charge Useful external B-field Experimental measure for mobility Examples

24 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 Your Homework Pr 1.3: 1 Deg in a semiconductor:

25 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 Your Homework Pr 1.3: 1 Deg in a semiconductor:

26 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 2-DEG: Energy: Special Schrödinger eqn (Con E) that accommodates: Electronic confinement: band bending due to space charge Useful external B-field Example: ECE874, Pr. 3.5 with E-field: determine direction of motion. Datta 1.2.1 would be correct way to continue the problem to get energy levels

27 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 2-DEG: Energy: 2-DEG wavefunction Use this wave function in the special Schroedinger eq’n and it will separate into k z and k x, k y parts. k z is a fixed quantized number(s). k x, k y are continuous numbers

28 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 2-DEG: Energy: For the k x, k y part:

29 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 How do I write  (z)?

30 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13

31

32

33 Example: write down the wave function for a 1-DEG

34 VM Ayres, ECE802-604, F13 Example: write down the energy eigenvalues for a 1-DEG assuming an infinite square well potential in the quantized directions


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