Tags: NEGF

Description

The non-equilibrium Greens function (NEGF) formalism provides a powerful conceptual and computational framework for treating quantum transport in nanodevices. It goes beyond the Landauer approach for ballistic, non-interacting electronics to include inelastic scattering and strong correlation effects at an atomistic level.

Check out Supriyo Datta's NEGF page for more information, or browse through the various resources listed below.

Resources (161-174 of 174)

  1. Review of Several Quantum Solvers and Applications

    Online Presentations | 11 Jun 2004 | Contributor(s):: Umberto Ravaioli

    Review of Several Quantum Solvers and Applications

  2. 2004 Computational Materials Science Summer School

    Workshops | 07 Jun 2004

    This short course will explore a range of computational approaches relevant for nanotechnology.

  3. Numerical Aspects of NEGF: The Recursive Green Function Algorithm

    Online Presentations | 14 Jun 2004 | Contributor(s):: Gerhard Klimeck

    Numerical Aspects of NEGF: The Recursive Green Function Algorithm

  4. MATLAB Scripts for "Quantum Transport: Atom to Transistor"

    Downloads | 15 Mar 2005 | Contributor(s):: Supriyo Datta

    Tinker with quantum transport models! Download the MATLAB scripts used to demonstrate the physics described in Supriyo Datta's book Quantum Transport: Atom to Transistor. These simple models are less than a page of code, and yet they reproduce much of the fundamental physics observed in...

  5. NanoMOS 2.5 Source Code Download

    Downloads | 22 Feb 2005 | Contributor(s):: Zhibin Ren, Sebastien Goasguen

    NanoMOS is a 2-D simulator for thin body (less than 5 nm), fully depleted, double-gated n-MOSFETs. A choice of five transport models is available (drift-diffusion, classical ballistic, energy transport, quantum ballistic, and quantum diffusive). The transport models treat quantum effects in the...

  6. Huckel-IV on the nanoHub

    Online Presentations | 09 Jul 2003 | Contributor(s):: Magnus Paulsson, Ferdows Zahid, Supriyo Datta

    Huckel-IV on the nanoHub

  7. Understanding Molecular Conduction

    Online Presentations | 08 Jul 2004 | Contributor(s):: Supriyo Datta

    It is common to differentiate between two ways of building a nanodevice: a topdown approach where we start from something big and chisel out what we want and abottom-up approach where we start from something small like atoms or molecules andassemble what we want. When it comes to describing...

  8. 2004 Molecular Conduction Workshop

    Workshops | 08 Jul 2004

    The tutorials supplied below were part of the Molecular Conduction Workshop held at Northwestern University in July of 2004.

  9. NEMO 1-D: The First NEGF-based TCAD Tool and Network for Computational Nanotechnology

    Online Presentations | 28 Dec 2004 | Contributor(s):: Gerhard Klimeck

    Nanotechnology has received a lot of public attention since U.S. President Clinton announced the U.S.National Nanotechnology Initiative. New approaches to applications in electronics, materials,medicine, biology and a variety of other areas will be developed in this new multi-disciplinary...

  10. 2004 Linking Bio and Nano Symposium

    Workshops | 26 Jul 2004

    Explore ways universities can work together in Bio-NanoTechnology. Discover research opportunities in this emerging area. Network with professionals and researchers who share common interests. Hear the latest on current research topics

  11. SURI 2003 Conference

    Workshops | 07 Aug 2003

    2003 SURI Conference Proceedings

  12. 2003 Molecular Conduction Workshop Agenda

    Presentation Materials | 09 Jul 2003

    This workshop brought together leading groups in this field to discuss status and key challenges in molecular electronics. Both experimental and theoretical/modeling efforts were discussed.

  13. Electrical Conduction through Molecules

    Papers | 08 Jul 2003 | Contributor(s):: Ferdows Zahid, Magnus Paulsson, Supriyo Datta

    In recent years, several experimental groups have reported measurements of the current-voltage (I-V) characteristics of individual or small numbers of molecules. Even three-terminal measurements showing evidence of transistor action has been reported using carbon nanotubes as well as...

  14. Resistance of a Molecule

    Papers | 29 Apr 2003 | Contributor(s):: Magnus Paulsson, Ferdows Zahid, Supriyo Datta

    In recent years, several experimental groups have reported measurements of the current-voltage (I-V) characteristics of individual or small numbers of molecules. Even three-terminal measurements showing evidence of transistor action has been reported using carbon nanotubes [1, 2] as well as...