Conductance Fluctuations in GaAs Nanowires and Graphene Nanoribbons

abstract: In mesoscopic physics, conductance fluctuations are a quantum interference phenomenon that comes from the phase interference of electron wave functions scattered by the impurity disorder. During the past few decades, conductance fluctuations have been studied in various materials including...

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Other Authors: Liu, Bobo (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.34941
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-34941
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-349412018-06-22T03:06:40Z Conductance Fluctuations in GaAs Nanowires and Graphene Nanoribbons abstract: In mesoscopic physics, conductance fluctuations are a quantum interference phenomenon that comes from the phase interference of electron wave functions scattered by the impurity disorder. During the past few decades, conductance fluctuations have been studied in various materials including metals, semiconductors and graphene. Since the patterns of conductance fluctuations is related to the distributions and configurations of the impurity scatterers, each sample has its unique pattern of fluctuations, which is considered as a sample fingerprint. Thus, research on conductance fluctuations attracts attention worldwide for its importance in both fundamental physics and potential technical applications. Since early experimental measurements of conductance fluctuations showed that the amplitudes of the fluctuations are on order of a universal value (e2/h), theorists proposed the hypothesis of ergodicity, e.g. the amplitudes of the conductance fluctuations by varying impurity configurations is the same as that from varying the Fermi energy or varying the magnetic field. They also proposed the principle of universality; e.g., that the observed fluctuations would appear the same in all materials. Recently, transport experiments in graphene reveal a deviation of fluctuation amplitudes from those expected from ergodicity. Thus, in my thesis work, I have carried out numerical research on the conductance fluctuations in GaAs nanowires and graphene nanoribbons in order to examine whether or not the theoretical principles of universality and ergodicity hold. Finite difference methods are employed to study the conductance fluctuations in GaAs nanowires, but an atomic basis tight-binding model is used in calculations of graphene nanoribbons. Both short-range disorder and long-range disorder are considered in the simulations of graphene. A stabilized recursive scattering matrix technique is used to calculate the conductance. In particular, the dependence of the observed fluctuations on the amplitude of the disorder has been investigated. Finally, the root-mean-square values of the amplitude of conductance fluctuations are calculated as a basis with which to draw the appropriate conclusions. The results for Fermi energy sweeps and magnetic field sweeps are compared and effects of magnetic fields on the conductance fluctuations of Fermi energy sweeps are discussed for both GaAs nanowires and graphene nanoribbons. Dissertation/Thesis Liu, Bobo (Author) Ferry, David K (Advisor) Akis, Richard (Committee member) Saraniti, Marco (Committee member) Goryll, Michael (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Electrical engineering Quantum physics Condensed matter physics Conductance Fluctuations GaAs Nanowires Graphene Nanoribbons Universality eng 119 pages Doctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 2015 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.34941 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Electrical engineering
Quantum physics
Condensed matter physics
Conductance Fluctuations
GaAs Nanowires
Graphene Nanoribbons
Universality
spellingShingle Electrical engineering
Quantum physics
Condensed matter physics
Conductance Fluctuations
GaAs Nanowires
Graphene Nanoribbons
Universality
Conductance Fluctuations in GaAs Nanowires and Graphene Nanoribbons
description abstract: In mesoscopic physics, conductance fluctuations are a quantum interference phenomenon that comes from the phase interference of electron wave functions scattered by the impurity disorder. During the past few decades, conductance fluctuations have been studied in various materials including metals, semiconductors and graphene. Since the patterns of conductance fluctuations is related to the distributions and configurations of the impurity scatterers, each sample has its unique pattern of fluctuations, which is considered as a sample fingerprint. Thus, research on conductance fluctuations attracts attention worldwide for its importance in both fundamental physics and potential technical applications. Since early experimental measurements of conductance fluctuations showed that the amplitudes of the fluctuations are on order of a universal value (e2/h), theorists proposed the hypothesis of ergodicity, e.g. the amplitudes of the conductance fluctuations by varying impurity configurations is the same as that from varying the Fermi energy or varying the magnetic field. They also proposed the principle of universality; e.g., that the observed fluctuations would appear the same in all materials. Recently, transport experiments in graphene reveal a deviation of fluctuation amplitudes from those expected from ergodicity. Thus, in my thesis work, I have carried out numerical research on the conductance fluctuations in GaAs nanowires and graphene nanoribbons in order to examine whether or not the theoretical principles of universality and ergodicity hold. Finite difference methods are employed to study the conductance fluctuations in GaAs nanowires, but an atomic basis tight-binding model is used in calculations of graphene nanoribbons. Both short-range disorder and long-range disorder are considered in the simulations of graphene. A stabilized recursive scattering matrix technique is used to calculate the conductance. In particular, the dependence of the observed fluctuations on the amplitude of the disorder has been investigated. Finally, the root-mean-square values of the amplitude of conductance fluctuations are calculated as a basis with which to draw the appropriate conclusions. The results for Fermi energy sweeps and magnetic field sweeps are compared and effects of magnetic fields on the conductance fluctuations of Fermi energy sweeps are discussed for both GaAs nanowires and graphene nanoribbons. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 2015
author2 Liu, Bobo (Author)
author_facet Liu, Bobo (Author)
title Conductance Fluctuations in GaAs Nanowires and Graphene Nanoribbons
title_short Conductance Fluctuations in GaAs Nanowires and Graphene Nanoribbons
title_full Conductance Fluctuations in GaAs Nanowires and Graphene Nanoribbons
title_fullStr Conductance Fluctuations in GaAs Nanowires and Graphene Nanoribbons
title_full_unstemmed Conductance Fluctuations in GaAs Nanowires and Graphene Nanoribbons
title_sort conductance fluctuations in gaas nanowires and graphene nanoribbons
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.34941
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