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Part B: Condensed Matter Physics

An analysis of phonon emission as controlled by the combined interaction with the acoustic and piezoelectric phonons in a degenerate III–V compound semiconductor using an approximated Fermi–Dirac distribution at low lattice temperatures

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Pages 803-818 | Received 16 Jan 2017, Accepted 28 Nov 2017, Published online: 12 Jan 2018
 

Abstract

Compound semiconductors being piezoelectric in nature, the intrinsic thermal vibration of the lattice atoms at any temperature gives rise to an additional potential field that perturbs the periodic potential field of the atoms. This is over and above the intrinsic deformation acoustic potential field which is always produced in every material. The scattering of the electrons through the piezoelectric perturbing potential is important in all compound semiconductors, particularly at the low lattice temperatures. Thus, the electrical transport in such materials is principally controlled by the combined interaction of the electrons with the deformation potential acoustic and piezoelectric phonons at low lattice temperatures. The study here, deals with the problem of phonon growth characteristics, considering the combined scattering of the non-equilibrium electrons in compound semiconductors, at low lattice temperatures. Beside degeneracy, other low temperature features, like the inelasticity of the electron–phonon collisions, and the full form of the phonon distribution have been duly considered. The distribution function of the degenerate ensemble of carriers, as given by the heated Fermi–Dirac function, has been approximated by a simplified, well-tested model. The model which has been proposed earlier, makes it much easier to carry out analytically the integrations without usual oversimplified approximations.

Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge the help rendered by S. Nag and S. Midday.

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