Home¡¡||¡¡About Us¡¡||¡¡News¡¡||¡¡Tabloid¡¡||¡¡Academic Exchanges¡¡||¡¡Equipment information¡¡||¡¡Chinese  
news search
¡¡
NEW10
1 ¡¡Supercritical water&
2 ¡¡Controlling electron
3 ¡¡Spectroscopy study&n
4 ¡¡Researchers discover
5 ¡¡Scientists achieve&n
6 ¡¡Engineering the 
7 ¡¡Terahertz pulses&nbs
8 ¡¡Harnessing electroma
9 ¡¡Nanoscale technique&
10 ¡¡A promising tec
TOP10 click no.
¡¡2009 Conference  121799
¡¡2008 Conference  119861
¡¡Researchers take&nbs 23645
¡¡2014 Conference  20641
¡¡The Research Ac 15892
¡¡The rise of&nbs 14018
¡¡Terahertz Near-Field 13618
¡¡THz Wave Photon 13339
¡¡2014 Conference  11045
¡¡2015 Conference  9813
     news center
Terahertz pulse increases electron density 1,000-fold
date£º2012-01-30 20:50:28 Click No.£º2668

Source: Eurekalert.

Findings point to advances in transistor and solar cell development

Researchers at Kyoto University have announced a breakthrough with broad implications for semiconductor-based devices. The findings, announced in the December 20 issue of the journal Nature Communications, may lead to the development of ultra-high-speed transistors and high-efficiency photovoltaic cells.

Working with standard semiconductor material (gallium arsenide, GaAs), the team observed that exposing the sample to a terahertz (1,000 gigahertz) range electric field pulse caused an avalanche of electron-hole pairs (excitons) to burst forth. This single-cycle pulse, lasting merely a picosecond (10^-12 s), resulted in a 1,000-fold increase in exciton density compared with the initial state of the sample.

¡°The terahertz pulse exposes the sample to an intense 1 MV/cm^2 electric field,¡± explains Hideki Hirori, team leader and Assistant Professor at Kyoto University¡¯s Institute for Integrated Cell-Material Sciences (iCeMS). ¡°The resulting exciton avalanche can be confirmed by a bright, near-infrared luminescence, demonstrating a three-order of magnitude increase in the number of carriers.¡±

Research in Kyoto using terahertz waves is led by Professor Koichiro Tanaka, whose lab at the iCeMS pursues numerous applications including the development of new biological imaging technologies.

¡°Since terahertz waves are sensitive to water, our goal is to create a microscope that will allow us to look inside living cells in real time,¡± says Prof. Tanaka. ¡°These just-released results using semiconductors are an entirely different field of science, but they demonstrate the rich potential that lies in the study of terahertz waves.¡±

The article, ¡°Extraordinary carrier multiplication gated by a picosecond electric field pulse¡± by H. Hirori, K. Shinokita, M. Shirai, S. Tani, Y. Kadoya, and K. Tanaka was published online in the December 20, 2011 issue of Nature Communications.

 
 

Print | close

Copyright© 2006-2007 www.thznetwork.org.cn All Rights Reserved
No.3, Gaopeng Rd, Hi-tech Development Zone, Chengdu, Sichuan, P.R.China, 610041