Overview
- Editors:
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David K. Ferry
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Center for Solid State Electronics Research, College of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, USA
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Carlo Jacoboni
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Dipartimento di Fisica, Università di Modena, Modena, Italy
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Table of contents (11 chapters)
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- A. M. Kriman, N. C. Kluksdahl, David K. Ferry, C. Ringhofer
Pages 239-287
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Back Matter
Pages 289-292
About this book
The majority of the chapters in this volume represent a series of lectures. that were given at a workshop on quantum transport in ultrasmall electron devices, held at San Miniato, Italy, in March 1987. These have, of course, been extended and updated during the period that has elapsed since the workshop was held, and have been supplemented with additional chapters devoted to the tunneling process in semiconductor quantum-well structures. The aim of this work is to review and present the current understanding in nonequilibrium quantum transport appropriate to semiconductors. Gen erally, the field of interest can be categorized as that appropriate to inhomogeneous transport in strong applied fields. These fields are most likely to be strongly varying in both space and time. Most of the literature on quantum transport in semiconductors (or in metallic systems, for that matter) is restricted to the equilibrium approach, in which spectral densities are maintained as semiclassical energy conserving delta functions, or perhaps incorporating some form of collision broadening through a Lorentzian shape, and the distribution functions are kept in the equilibrium Fermi-Dirac form. The most familiar field of nonequilibrium transport, at least for the semiconductor world, is that of hot carriers in semiconductors.
Editors and Affiliations
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Center for Solid State Electronics Research, College of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, USA
David K. Ferry
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Dipartimento di Fisica, Università di Modena, Modena, Italy
Carlo Jacoboni