When noise gets electrons moving

When noise gets electrons moving

Studying the motion of electrons in a disordered environment is no simple task. Often, understanding such effects requires a quantum simulator designed to expose them in a different physical setup.

This was precisely the approach adopted by Denis Makarov and Leonid Kon'kov from the Victor I. Il'ichev Pacific Oceanological Institute in Vladivostok in a new study published in EPJ B. They relied on a simulator of electronic motion subjected to noise stemming from a flux of .

Their findings could lead to semi-conductor devices of a new kind, operated through acoustic radiations. Through numerical simulation, the authors found that noise fluctuations lead to counter-intuitive electron transport behaviour and a change of direction in atomic transport.

They deducted that being exposed to sound wave fluctuation gives rise to an electronic current that spontaneously changes its direction.

More information: Makarov, D. V. and Kon'kov, L. E. (2014). Quantum transport in a driven disordered potential: onset of directed current and noise-induced current reversal. European Physical Journal B. DOI: 10.1140/epjb/e2014-50568-3

Journal information: European Physical Journal B

Provided by Springer

Citation: When noise gets electrons moving (2014, December 4) retrieved 26 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2014-12-noise-electrons.html
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