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Quantum dots exhibit reproducible conductance fluctuations at low temperatures due to electron quantum interference. The sensitivity of these fluctuations to the underlying disorder potential has only recently been fully realized. We exploit this sensitivity to obtain a novel tool for better understanding the role that background impurities play in the electrical properties of high-mobility AlGaAs/GaAs heterostructures and nanoscale devices. In particular, we report the remarkable ability to first alter the disorder potential in an undoped AlGaAs/GaAs heterostructure by optical illumination and then reset it back to its initial configuration by room temperature thermal cycling in the dark. We attribute this behavior to a mixture of C background impurities acting as shallow acceptors and deep trapping by Si impurities. This alter and reset capability, not possible in modulation-doped heterostructures, offers an exciting route to studying how scattering from even small densities of charged impurities influences the properties of nanoscale semiconductor devices.
Heat produced during a reset operation is meant to show a fundamental bound known as Landauer limit, while simple switch operations have an expected minimum amount of produced heat equal to zero. However, in both cases, present-day technology realiza
Nanoscale solid-solid contacts define a wealth of material behaviours from the electrical and thermal conductivity in modern electronic devices to friction and losses in micro- and nanoelectromechanical systems. For modern ultra-high integration proc
Solid state ionic conductors are good candidates for the next generation of nonvolatile computer memory elements. Such devices have to show reproducible resistance switching at reasonable voltage and current values even if scaled down to the nanomete
We aim to provide engineers with an introduction to the non-equilibrium Greens function (NEGF) approach, which provides a powerful conceptual tool and a practical analysis method to treat small electronic devices quantum mechanically and atomisticall
This mini-review is intended as a short introduction to electron flow in nanostructures. Its aim is to provide a brief overview of this topic for people who are interested in the thermodynamics of quantum systems but know little about nanostructures.