The Non-Equilibrium Green's Function Method for Nanoscale Device Simulation


Book Description

For modeling the transport of carriers in nanoscale devices, a Green-function formalism is the most accurate approach. Due to the complexity of the formalism, one should have a deep understanding of the underlying principles and use smart approximations and numerical methods for solving the kinetic equations at a reasonable computational time. In this book the required concepts from quantum and statistical mechanics and numerical methods for calculating Green functions are presented. The Green function is studied in detail for systems both under equilibrium and under nonequilibrium conditions. Because the formalism enables rigorous modeling of different scattering mechanisms in terms of self-energies, but an exact evaluation of self-energies for realistic systems is not possible, their approximation and inclusion in the quantum kinetic equations of the Green functions are elaborated. All the elements of the kinetic equations, which are the device Hamiltonian, contact self-energies and scattering self-energies, are examined and efficient methods for their evaluation are explained. Finally, the application of these methods to study novel electronic devices such as nanotubes, graphene, Si-nanowires and low-dimensional thermoelectric devices and photodetectors are discussed.




Progress in Nonequilibrium Green's Functions II


Book Description

Annotation Proceedings of the conference Progress in Nonequilibrium Green's Functions, held in Dresden, Germany, from August 19-23, 2002.




Progress In Nonequilibrium Green's Functions, Sep 99, Germany


Book Description

Equilibrium and nonequilibrium properties of correlated many-body systems are of growing interest in many fields of physics, including condensed matter, dense plasmas, nuclear matter and particles. The most powerful and general method which applies equally to all these areas is given by quantum field theory.Written by the leading experts and understandable to non-specialists, this book provides an overview on the basic ideas and concepts of the method of nonequilibrium Green's functions. It is complemented by modern applications of the method to a variety of topics, such as optics and transport in dense plasmas and semiconductors; correlations, bound states and coherence; strong field effects and short-pulse lasers; nuclear matter and QCD.Authors include: Gordon Bayan, Pawel Danielewicz, Don DuBois, Hartmut Haug, Klaus Henneberger, Antti-Pekka Jauho, Jörn Kuoll, Dietrich Kremp, Pavel Lipavsky and Paul C Martin.




Nonequilibrium Many-Body Theory of Quantum Systems


Book Description

The Green's function method is one of the most powerful and versatile formalisms in physics, and its nonequilibrium version has proved invaluable in many research fields. This book provides a unique, self-contained introduction to nonequilibrium many-body theory. Starting with basic quantum mechanics, the authors introduce the equilibrium and nonequilibrium Green's function formalisms within a unified framework called the contour formalism. The physical content of the contour Green's functions and the diagrammatic expansions are explained with a focus on the time-dependent aspect. Every result is derived step-by-step, critically discussed and then applied to different physical systems, ranging from molecules and nanostructures to metals and insulators. With an abundance of illustrative examples, this accessible book is ideal for graduate students and researchers who are interested in excited state properties of matter and nonequilibrium physics.




Nonequilibrium Green's Function-Hierarchical Equation of Motion Method for Time-Dependent Quantum Transport


Book Description

This dissertation, "Nonequilibrium Green's Function-hierarchical Equation of Motion Method for Time-dependent Quantum Transport" by Shuguang, Chen, 陈曙光, was obtained from The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong) and is being sold pursuant to Creative Commons: Attribution 3.0 Hong Kong License. The content of this dissertation has not been altered in any way. We have altered the formatting in order to facilitate the ease of printing and reading of the dissertation. All rights not granted by the above license are retained by the author. Abstract: The nonequilibrium Green's function-hierarchical equation of motion (NEGFHEOM) method has been developed to simulate the time-dependent electron transport process. The real-time evolution of the reduced single-electron density matrix is solved through the Liouville-von-Neumann equation. The method is very efficient compared to conventional NEGF formulas which need to discretize the simulation time. The hierarchical equation of motion (HEOM) is closed at the second-tier in the time-dependent noninteracting Kohn-Sham framework. When combined with the wide band limit (WBL) approximation, the HEOM terminate at the first-tier. The resulting NEGF-HEOM-WBL method is particularly suitable for simulating the long time transient dynamics for large systems. The method developed is first applied to calculate the transient current through an array of as many as 1000 quantum dots. Upon switching on the bias voltage, the current increases linearly with respect to time before reaching its steady state value. And the time required for the current to reach its steady state value is exactly the time for a conducting electron to travel through the array at Fermi velocity. These phenomena can be understood by simple analysis on the energetics of the quantum dots or by classical electron gas model. Then the method is employed to investigate several simple molecular circuits, in which the para-linkage or meta-linkage benzene acts as the transmitting molecular entity. The simulation results shows that it takes a certain amount of time before the quantum interference manifests itself, and that the transmission through the meta case is hundreds of times smaller than that through the para case. To investigate the quantum interference process in molecular electronics, the concept of Buttiker probe is introduced. The Buttiker probe is an electrode that, when attached to electronic devices, causes the coherence passing through disappear. Simulation results show that the Buttiker probe can enhance the transmission of the meta benzene system through destroying the constructive interference. By turning the probe on and off, it can be observed that large strong correlations are indeed built up as electrons are transported through benzenoid structures - when the decoherence is turned off, the current rises, and when the decoherence is turned back on, the current falls. Finally, TDDFT(B)-NEGF-HEOM-WBL method is implemented to solve realistic systems in the formalism of time-dependent density functional theory (tightbinding). Ab initio calculations are carried out to simulate the time-dependent electron transport through a CNT-based device. The simulation results show that when the input bias voltage is in low frequency, both the conventional adiabatic approximation method and the NEGF-HEOM-WBL methods are good enough. However, when high frequency dynamic responses are need to be captured, the NEGF-HEOM-WBL method is more suitable. DOI: 10.5353/th_b5312338 Subjects: Quantum theory - Mathematics Green's functions Transport theory




Non-equilibrium Green's Functions (NEGF) and Quantum Kinetic Theory


Book Description

In this work we show that Non-equilibrium Green's Function Perturbation Theory (NEGF) is really the overarching perturbative transport theory. It is developed in 3 directions: Landauer-like theory, kinetic theory and Green-Kubo linear response theory. This work generalizes the 2 directions of Landauer-like theory and the kinetic theory. Firstly, NEGF is used to derive phonon-phonon Hedin-like functional derivative equations which generates conserving self energy approximations for phonon-phonon interaction. Secondly, for the Landauer-like theory, using the perturbation expansion, we obtain anharmonic corrections to the ballistic energy current and to the noise associated to the energy current. Along a seperate line, we incooperate high mass disorder into the ballistic energy current formula. The coherent potential approximation (CPA) is found to be compatible with the ballistic energy current expression. Lastly, for the kinetic theory, Wigner coordinates + gradient expansion easily allow the derivation of phonon-phonon correlation corrections to kinetic equations. The main feature of this work is the extremely detailed mathematical explanations.




Non-Equilibrium Nano-Physics


Book Description

The aim of this book is to present a formulation of the non-equilibrium physics in nanoscale systems in terms of many-body states and operators and, in addition, discuss a diagrammatic approach to Green functions expressed by many-body states. The intention is not to give an account of strongly correlated systems as such. Thus, the focus of this book ensues from the typical questions that arise when addressing nanoscale systems from a practical point of view, e.g. current-voltage asymmetries, negative differential conductance, spin-dependent tunneling. The focus is on nanoscale systems constituted of complexes of subsystems interacting with one another, under non-equilibrium conditions, in which the local properties of the subsystems are preferably being described in terms of its (many-body) eigenstates.




Theory and Simulation Methods for Electronic and Phononic Transport in Thermoelectric Materials


Book Description

This book introduces readers to state-of-the-art theoretical and simulation techniques for determining transport in complex band structure materials and nanostructured-geometry materials, linking the techniques developed by the electronic transport community to the materials science community. Starting from the semi-classical Boltzmann Transport Equation method for complex band structure materials, then moving on to Monte Carlo and fully quantum mechanical models for nanostructured materials, the book addresses the theory and computational complexities of each method, as well as their advantages and capabilities. Presented in language that is accessible to junior computational scientists, while including enough detail and depth with regards to numerical implementation to tackle modern research problems, it offers a valuable resource for computational scientists and postgraduate researchers whose work involves the theory and simulation of electro-thermal transport in advanced materials.







The Green Function Method in Statistical Mechanics


Book Description

Concise monograph devoted to techniques of solving many-body problems in physics using the quantum-mechanical Green function method. Requires some familiarity with the basic theory of quantum mechanics and statistical mechanics. 1962 edition.