Image for The physics of nanoelectronics: transport and fluctuation phenomena at low temperatures

The physics of nanoelectronics: transport and fluctuation phenomena at low temperatures - 21 (First edition.)

Part of the Oxford Master Series in Condensed Matter Physics series
See all formats and editions

Advances in nanotechnology have allowed physicists and engineers to miniaturize electronic structures to the limit where finite-size related phenomena start to impact their properties.

This book discusses such phenomena and models made for their description.

The book starts from the semiclassical description of nonequilibrium effects, details the scattering theory used for quantum transport calculations, and explains the main interference effects.

It also describeshow to treat fluctuations and correlations, how interactions affect transport through small islands, and how superconductivity modifies these effects.

The last two chapters describe new emerging fields related with graphene and nanoelectromechanics.

The focus of the book is on the phenomena ratherthan formalism, but the book still explains in detail the main models constructed for these phenomena.

It also introduces a number of electronic devices, including the single-electron transistor, the superconducting tunnel junction refrigerator, and the superconducting quantum bit.

Read More
Available
£130.20
Add Line Customisation
Available on VLeBooks
Add to List
Product Details
Oxford University Press
0191654469 / 9780191654466
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
621.381
31/01/2013
England
English
279 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%