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Electrical Transport in Nanoscale Systems
This graduate textbook describes the transport phenomena in systems of nanoscale dimensions for graduate students in physics, chemistry, and electrical engineering.
Massimiliano Di Ventra (Author)
9780521896344, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 7 August 2008
494 pages, 23 b/w illus. 65 exercises
25.3 x 17.8 x 2.7 cm, 1.12 kg
In recent years there has been a huge increase in the research and development of nanoscale science and technology. Central to the understanding of the properties of nanoscale structures is the modeling of electronic conduction through these systems. This graduate textbook provides an in-depth description of the transport phenomena relevant to systems of nanoscale dimensions. In this textbook the different theoretical approaches are critically discussed, with emphasis on their basic assumptions and approximations. The book also covers information content in the measurement of currents, the role of initial conditions in establishing a steady state, and the modern use of density-functional theory. Topics are introduced by simple physical arguments, with particular attention to the non-equilibrium statistical nature of electrical conduction, and followed by a detailed formal derivation. This textbook is ideal for graduate students in physics, chemistry, and electrical engineering.
Preface
1. A primer on electron transport
2. Drude, Kubo, and Boltzmann approaches
3. Landauer approach
4. Non-equilibrium Green's function formalism
5. Noise
6. Electron-ion interaction
7. The micro-canonical picture of transport
8. Hydrodynamics of the electron liquid
Appendices
References
Index.
Subject Areas: Electrical engineering [THR], Materials science [TGM], Statistical physics [PHS], Quantum physics [quantum mechanics & quantum field theory PHQ], Condensed matter physics [liquid state & solid state physics PHFC]