Advanced physics of electron transport in semiconductors and nanostructures
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書誌事項
Advanced physics of electron transport in semiconductors and nanostructures
(Graduate texts in physics)
Springer, c2016
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内容説明・目次
内容説明
This textbook is aimed at second-year graduate students in Physics, Electrical Engineer ing, or Materials Science. It presents a rigorous introduction to electronic transport in solids, especially at the nanometer scale.Understanding electronic transport in solids requires some basic knowledge of Ham iltonian Classical Mechanics, Quantum Mechanics, Condensed Matter Theory, and Statistical Mechanics. Hence, this book discusses those sub-topics which are required to deal with electronic transport in a single, self-contained course. This will be useful for students who intend to work in academia or the nano/ micro-electronics industry.Further topics covered include: the theory of energy bands in crystals, of second quan tization and elementary excitations in solids, of the dielectric properties of semicon ductors with an emphasis on dielectric screening and coupled interfacial modes, of electron scattering with phonons, plasmons, electrons and photons, of the derivation of transport equations in semiconductors and semiconductor nanostructures somewhat at the quantum level, but mainly at the semi-classical level. The text presents examples relevant to current research, thus not only about Si, but also about III-V compound semiconductors, nanowires, graphene and graphene nanoribbons. In particular, the text gives major emphasis to plane-wave methods applied to the electronic structure of solids, both DFT and empirical pseudopotentials, always paying attention to their effects on electronic transport and its numerical treatment. The core of the text is electronic transport, with ample discussions of the transport equations derived both in the quantum picture (the Liouville-von Neumann equation) and semi-classically (the Boltzmann transport equation, BTE). An advanced chapter, Chapter 18, is strictly related to the 'tricky' transition from the time-reversible Liouville-von Neumann equation to the time-irreversible Green's functions, to the density-matrix formalism and, classically, to the Boltzmann transport equation. Finally, several methods for solving the BTE are also reviewed, including the method of moments, iterative methods, direct matrix inversion, Cellular Automata and Monte Carlo. Four appendices complete the text.
目次
Part I A Brief Review of Classical and Quantum Mechanics
Lagrangian and Hamiltonian formulation of Classical Mechanics
Superposition principle and Hilbert spaces
Canonical Quantization
Review of time-independent and time-dependent perturbation theory
The Periodic Table, molecules and bonds in a nutshell
Part II Crystals and Electronic Properties of Solids
Crystals: Lattices, structure, symmetry, reciprocal lattice
The electronic structure of crystals
Single-electron dynamics: Acceleration theorems, Landau levels, Stark-ladder quantization
Part III Second Quantization and Elementary Excitations in Solids
Lagrangian and Hamiltonian formulation of classical fields
Canonical Quantization of fields ('Second Quantization')
An example: Quantization of the Schroedinger Field
Elements of Quantum Statistical Mechanics and the Spin-Statistics Theorem
Quantization of the charge density: Plasmons
Quantization of the vibrational properties of solids: Phonons
Quantization of the Electromagnetic Fields: Photons
Dielectric properties of semiconductors
Part IV Electron Scattering in Solids
Generalities about scattering in semiconductors
Electron-phonon Interactions
Scattering with Ionized Impurities: Brooks-Herring and Conwell-Weisskopf models, Ridley's statistical screening, Friedel sum rule and partial-waves
Coulomb interactions among free carriers, impact-ionization, Auger recombination
Interfacial and line-edge roughness with examples: Si/SiO2, heterostructures, graphene nanoribbons
Interfacial excitations with examples: III-Vs plasmon/phonon coupled modes, suspended grapheme
Radiative Processes: The dipole approximation, absorption spectrum for III-Vs
Part V Electronic Transport
The Density Matrix and the Liouville-von Neumann equation
Overview of quantum-transport formalisms
From Liouville-von Neumann to Boltzmann: The semiclassical limit.
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