New '1/f noise' discovery promises to improve semiconductor-based sensors
ARGONNE, Ill. (May 10, 2007) — More sensitive sensors and detectors
based on semiconductor electronics could result from new findings by researchers
from the United States, Norway and Russia.
Their research has yielded a decisive step in identifying the origin of the
universal "one-over-f" (1/f) noise phenomenon; “f” stands for "frequency."
"One-over-f noise appears almost everywhere, from electronic devices
and fatigue in materials to traffic on roads, the distribution of stars in
galaxies, and DNA sequences," said Valerii Vinokour or Argonne's Materials
Science Division. "Finding the common origin of one-over-f noise in its
many forms is one of the grand challenges of materials physics. Our theory
establishes the origin and lower limit to one-over-f noise in semiconductor
electronics, helping to optimize detectors for commercial application."
Noise is a fluctuation in time, a deviation from the average. Humans and other
animals carry a common example in their heartbeats, where 1/f noise can be
detected as a deviation from normal pulse. In nanomaterials, such as the tiny
circuits in semiconductor electronics, the noise generated by the random motion
of a single electron can be devastating, since there are so few electrons in
the system.
Vinokour and his team showed that the 1/f noise in doped semiconductors, the
platform for all modern electronics, originates in the random distribution
of impurities and the mutual interaction of the many electrons surrounding
them. These two ingredients — randomness and interaction — trap
electrons in the Coulomb glass, a state like window glass where electrons
move by hopping from one random location to another. 1/f noise arises from
the electrons' hopping motion. After discovering the theoretical connection
between 1/f noise and formation of the Coulomb glass, Vinokour and his collaborators
confirmed it with large-scale computer simulations; suppression of the interactions
was found to remove the Coulomb glass behavior and 1/f noise.
“Our results," Vinokour said, "establish that one-over-f noise is
a generic property of Coulomb glasses and, moreover, of a wide class of random
interacting systems and phenomena ranging from mechanical properties of real
materials and electric properties of electronic devices to fluctuations in
the traffic of computer networks and the Internet.”
These research findings were published in the May 11 issue of Physical
Review Letters.
Collaborators on this research were Vinokour and Andreas Glatz, at Argonne,
Y.M. Galperin from University
of Oslo, Oslo, Norway, and A.F. Ioffe of the
Physico-Technical Institute of the Russian
Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg, Russia.
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For more information, please
contact Steve McGregor (630/252-5580 or media@anl.gov)
at Argonne.
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