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26241-26260hit(26286hit)

  • Two-Dimensional Monte Carlo Simulation of Resonant-Tunneling Hot Electron Transistors (RHETs)

    Hiroaki OHNISHI  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-C No:2
      Page(s):
    200-206

    In two-dimensional simulation of thin-base RHET, we combined three different simulation methods--the Schrödinger equation, the Monte Carlo simulation, and two-dimensional device simulation within a drift and diffusion model. We found that, in the thin-base RHET, the potential distribution differs from that expected from the thick-base RHET. In the thin-base RHET, the potential of the intrinsic base region does not equal that of the base electrode because the intrinsic base region is depleted and the negative emitter voltage (VEB0) raises the potential of both the intrinsic base and the nondoped region under the intrinsic base. There are also modified by the collector voltage. We also show emitter current-voltage characteristics, transfer ratio, and transit time calculated using this method and compare them with results for the one-dimensional case.

  • A Unified Process and Device Simulation System--P & D Workbench--

    Yukio TAMEGAYA  Hideki IKEUCHI  Hiroyoshi KUGE  Yutaka AKIYAMA  Yuukichi HATANAKA  Masao ASOU  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-C No:2
      Page(s):
    234-240

    This paper describes a unified process and device simulation system named P &D Workbench (Process and Device Workbench). The P &D Workbench is an EWS (Engineering Work Station) based system which is connected with MFCs (Main Frame Computers) via networks and can easily execute 2-dimensional process, device, topography and capacitance simulations. Since the P &D Workbench has a supervisor, data-base and excellent user interface using Japanese menu functions and mouse operations, a handling time can be dramatically reduced. The supervisor controls the simulation sequence and file transfer, and manages jobs and files both on EWSs and MFCs, so that plural simulations of splitting conditions can be automatically executed. Short TAT (Turn Around Time) is achieved by selecting an appropriate platform depended on a problem size and MFCs' CPU loads. The effects of the P &D Workbench are shown in examples applied to the development of a 4M-DRAM.

  • Experimentally Verified Majority and Minority Mobilities in Heavily Doped GaAs for Device Simulations

    Herbert S. BENNETT  Jeremiah R. LOWNEY  Masaaki TOMIZAWA  Tadao ISHIBASHI  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-C No:2
      Page(s):
    161-171

    Low-field mobilities and velocity versus electric field relations are among the key input parameters for drift-diffusion simulations of field-effect and bipolar transistors. For example, most device simulations that treat scattering from ionized impurities contain mobilities or velocity versus field relations based on the Born approximation (BA). The BA is insensitive to the sign of the charged impurity and is especially poor for ionized impurity scattering because of the relatively strong scattering of long-wavelength carriers, which have low energies, and therefore violate the validity condition for the BA. Such carriers occur at high symmetry points in the Brillouin zone and are critical for device behavior. There has been a tendency in the past to assume that majority and minority mobilities are equal. This assumption can lead to incorrect interpretations of device data and thereby misleading design strategies based on such simulations. We have calculated the majority electron and minority hole mobilities in GaAs at 300 K for donor densities between 51016 and 11019 cm-3 and the majority hole and minority electron mobilities for acceptor densities between 51016 and 11020 cm-3. We have included all the important scattering mechanisms for GaAs: acoustic phonon, polar optic phonon, nonpolar optic phonon (holes only), piezoelectric, ionized impurity, carrier-carrier, and plasmon scattering. The ionized impurity and carrier-carrier scattering processes have been calculated with a quantum mechanical phase-shift analysis to obtain more accurate matrix elements for these two scattering mechanisms. We compare the total scattering rate for majority electrons due to ionized impurities based on exact phase shifts and on the BA used by Brooks-Herring. We also present additional data that show the differences between the exact phase-shift analyses and the BA for majority electron scattering rates as functions of carrier energy and scattering angle. These results show that the calculated low-field mobilities are in good agreement with experiment, but they predict that at high dopant densities minority mobilities should increase with increasing dopant density for a short range of densities. This effect occurs because of the reduction of plasmon scattering and the removal of carriers from carrier-carrier scattering because of the Pauli exclusion principle. Some recent experiments support this finding. These results are important for device modeling because of the need to have reliable values for the minority mobilities and velocity-field relations.

  • General-Purpose Device Simulation System with an Effective Graphic Interface

    Masaaki TOMIZAWA  Akira YOSHII  Shunji SEKI  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-C No:2
      Page(s):
    226-233

    We have developed an efficient general-purpose two-dimensional device simulation system which consists of a solver, and pre- and post-processors. This system can easily handle any complicated device having a non-rectangular shape. It can also be applied to compound semiconductor devices with heterojunctions, including optical devices such as laser diodes. In order to handle any device, a new program for construction of device geometry is developed as a preprocessor. It has an efficient graphic interface to reduce the time required to input data for simulations, which is a very time consuming task for complicated devices. A new efficient data structure representing device geometry is introduced in the program. During postprocessing, any physical quantity can be displayed on the multi-window screen. In addition, a general-purpose solver for basic semiconductor equations is implemented in the system. Using this system, any device can be successfully analyzed in a unified manner and the turn-around time for the simulation is significantly reduced.

  • Exocentric Control of Audio Imaging in Binaural Telecommunication

    Michael COHEN  Nobuo KOIZUMI  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-A No:2
      Page(s):
    164-170

    Sound field telecommunication describes a voice communication system, intended to implement a virtual meeting, in which participants at distant sites experience the sensation of sharing a single room for conversation. Binaural synthesis reconstructs the sound propagation pattern of a particular room or environment in the vicinity of each ear, which seems appropriate for a personal multimedia environment. Localization cues in spatial hearing comprise both the sink's transfer function and source attenuation. Sink directional cues are captured by binaural head related transfer functions (HRTFs). Source attenuation is modeled as a frequency-independent function of the direction, dispersion, and distance of the source, capturing sensitivity, amplification, and mutual position. Audio windows, aural analogues of video windows, can be thought of as a user interface to binaural sound presentation for a teleconferencing system. Exocentric representation of audio window entities allows manipulation of all teleconferees in a projected egalitarian medium. We are implementing a system that combines dynamically selected HRTFs with dynamically determined source and sink position, azimuth, focus, and size parameters, controlled via iconic manipulation in a graphical window. With such an interface, users may arrange a virtual conference environment, steering the virtual positions of teleconferees.

  • Process Simulation for Laser Recrystallization

    Bo HU  Albert SEIDL  Gertraud NEUMAYER  Reinhold BUCHNER  Karl HABERGER  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-C No:2
      Page(s):
    138-144

    Modeling and numerical simulation of crystal growth of Si film and heat transport in 3D structure were made for optimization of physical and geometrical parameters used during laser recrystallization. Based on simulations a new concept called micro-absorber was introduced for obtaining defect-free Si films.

  • Speech Coding and Recognition: A Review

    Andreas S. SPANIAS  Frank H. WU  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-A No:2
      Page(s):
    132-148

    The objective of this paper is to provide an overview of the recent developments in the area of speech processing and in particular in the fields of speech coding and speech recognition. The speech coding review covers DPCM coders, model-based vocoders, waveform coders, and hybrid coders. The hybrid coders are described in some detail since they are the subject of current research. Our treatment of speech recognition techniques concentrates on the methodologies for voice recognition and the progress made in speaker independent recognition. In addition, we describe the efforts towards commercial deployment of this technology.

  • Information Disseminating Schemes for Fault Tolerance in Hypercubes

    Svante CARLSSON  Yoshihide IGARASHI  Kumiko KANAI  Andrzej LINGAS  Kinya MIURA  Ola PETERSSON  

     
    PAPER-Graphs, Networks and Matroids

      Vol:
    E75-A No:2
      Page(s):
    255-260

    We present schemes for disseminating information in the n-dimensional hypercube with some faulty nodes/edges. If each processor can send a message to t neighbors at each round, and if the number of faulty nodes/edges is k(kn), then this scheme will broadcast information from any source to all destinations within any consecutive n+[(k+l)/t] rounds. We also discuss the case where the number of faulty nodes is not less than n.

  • Prosodic Control to Express Emotions for Man-Machine Speech Interaction

    Yoshinori KITAHARA  Yoh'ichi TOHKURA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-A No:2
      Page(s):
    155-163

    In speech output expected as an ideal man-machine interface, there exists an important issue on emotion production in order to not only improve its naturalness but also achieve more sophisticated speech interaction between man and machine. Speech has two aspects, which are prosodic information and phonetic feature. For the purpose of application to natural and high quality speech synthesis, the role of prosody in speech perception has been studied. In this paper, prosodic components, which contribute to the expression of emotions and their intensity, are clarified by analyzing emotional speech and by conducting listening tests of synthetic speech. The analysis is performed by substituting the components of neutral speech (i.e., one with no particular emotion) with those of emotional speech preserving the temporal correspondence by means of DTW. It has been confirmed that prosodic components, which are composed of pitch structure, temporal structure and amplitude structure, contribute to the expression of emotions more than the spectral structure of speech. The results of listening tests using prosodic substituted speech show that temporal structure is the most important for the expression of anger, while all of three components are much more important for the intensity of anger. Pitch structure also plays a significant role in the expression of joy and sadness and their intensity. These results make it possible to convert neutral utterances into utterances expressing various emotions. The results can also be applied to controlling the emotional characteristics of speech in synthesis by rule.

  • A Control Method for an Uninterruptible Power Supply with a Bidirectional Cycloconverter

    Tadahito AOKI  Katsuichi YOTSUMOTO  Seiichi MUROYAMA  

     
    PAPER-Power Supply

      Vol:
    E75-B No:1
      Page(s):
    34-41

    This paper describes a new configuration and control method for an uninterruptible power supply (UPS) with a bidirectional cycloconverter. When commercial AC power is operating normally, the load is supplied by commercial AC power and the bidirectional cycloconverter operates as a battery charger. During interruptions of commercial AC power, the bidirectional cycloconverter operates as an inverter and supplies AC power to the load. Unlike a conventional UPS, this new configuration does not require a battery charger, so it can be small, light-weight, cost-effective, and highly efficient. The output voltage characteristics and the transient voltage drop in the output when commercial AC power fails are also discussed by numerical analysis and experiments.

  • Optical Information Processing Systems

    W. Thomas CATHEY  Satoshi ISHIHARA  Soo-Young LEE  Jacek CHROSTOWSKI  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-A No:1
      Page(s):
    28-37

    We review the role of optics in interconnects, analog processing, neural networks, and digital computing. The properties of low interference, massively parallel interconnections, and very high data rates promise extremely high performance for optical information processing systems.

  • Surface Emitting Lasers and Parallel Operating Devices--Fundamentals and Prospects--

    Kenichi IGA  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-C No:1
      Page(s):
    10-17

    In this paper we review the recent progress and basic technology of vertical cavity surface emitting lasers together with related parallel surface operating optical devices. First, the concept of surface emitting lasers is presented, and then currently developed device technologies will be reviewed. We will feature several technical issues, such as multi-layer structures, 2-dimensional arrays, photonic integration, etc. Lastly, future prospects for parallel lightwave systems will be discussed.

  • Theory of Scalar Wave Scattering from a Conducting Target in Random Media

    Mitsuo TATEIBA  Eiichi TOMITA  

     
    PAPER-Electromagnetic Theory

      Vol:
    E75-C No:1
      Page(s):
    101-106

    A method is presented for analyzing the scalar wave scattering from a conducting target of arbitrary shape in random media for both the Dirichlet and Neumann problems. The current generators on the target are introduced and expressed generally by the Yasuura method. When using the current generators, the scattering problem is reduced to the wave propagation problem in random media.

  • Distributed Leader Election on Chordal Ring Networks

    Koji NAKANO  Toshimitsu MASUZAWA  Nobuki TOKURA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-D No:1
      Page(s):
    58-63

    A chordal ring network is a processor network on which n processors are arranged to a ring with additional chords. We study a distributed leader election algorithm on chordal ring networks and present trade-offs between the message complexity and the number of chords at each processor and between the message complexity and the length of chords as follows:For every d(1dlog* n1) there exists a chordal ring network with d chords at each processor on which the message complexity for leader election is O(n(log(d1)nlog* n)).For every d(1dlog* n1) there exists a chordal ring network with log(d1)nd1 chords at each processor on which the message complexity for leader election is O(dn).For every m(2mn/2) there exists a chordal ring network whose chords have at most length m such that the message complexity for leader election is O((n/m)log n).

  • Surface Emitting Lasers and Parallel Operating Devices--Fundamentals and Prospects--

    Kenichi IGA  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-A No:1
      Page(s):
    12-19

    In this paper we review the recent progress and basic technology of vertical cavity surface emitting lasers together with related parallel surface operating optical devices. First, the concept of surface emitting lasers is presented, and then currently developed device technologies will be reviewed. We will feature several technical issues, such as multi-layer structures, 2-dimensional arrays, photonic integration, etc. Lastly, future prospects for parallel lightwave systems will be discussed.

  • A Study of Line Spectrum Pair Frequency Representation for Speech Recognition

    Fikret S. GURGEN  Shigeki SAGAYAMA  Sadaoki FURUI  

     
    PAPER-Speech

      Vol:
    E75-A No:1
      Page(s):
    98-102

    This paper investigates the performance of the line spectrum pair (LSP) frequency parameter representation for speech recognition. Transitional parameters of LSP frequencies are defined using first-order regression coefficients. The transitional and the instantaneous frequency parameters are linearly combined to generate a single feature vector used for recognition. The performance of the single vector is compared with that of the cepstral coefficients (CC) representation using a minimumdistance classifier in speaker-independent isolated word recognition experiments. In the speech recognition experiments, the transitional and the instantaneous coefficients are also combined in the distance domain. Also, inverse variance weighted Euclidean measures are defined using LSP frequencies to achieve Mel-scale-like warping and the new warped-frequencies are used in recognition experiments. The performance of the single feature vector defined with transitional and instantaneous LSP frequencies is found to be the best among the measures used in the experiments.

  • Nonlinear Optical Properties of Organics in Comparison with Semiconductors and Dielectrics

    Takayoshi KOBAYASHI  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-A No:1
      Page(s):
    38-45

    The nonlinear optical properties of organics with unsaturated bonds were compared with those of inorganics including semiconductors and dielectrics. Because of the mesomeric effect, namely quantum mechanical resonance effect among configurations, aromatic molecules and polymers have larger optical nonlinear parameters defined as δ(n)=X(n)/(X(l))n both for the second (n=2) and third-order (n=3) nonlinearities. Experimental results of ultrafast nonlinear response of conjugated polymers, especially polydiacetylenes, were described and a model is proposed to explain the relaxation processes of photoexcitations in the conjugated polymers. Applying the model constructed on the basis of the extensive experimental study, we propose model polymers to obtain ultrafast resonant optical nonlinearity.

  • A Fast Viterbi Decoding in Optical Channels

    Hiroyuki YASHIMA  Jouji SUZUKI  Iwao SASASE  Shinsaku MORI  

     
    PAPER-Optical Communication

      Vol:
    E75-B No:1
      Page(s):
    26-33

    A fast Viterbi decoding technique with path reduction in optical channels is presented. This decoding exploits the asymmetric characteristic of optical channels. In the decoding trellis, the branches with low or no possibility being correct path are eliminated based on the detected signal level. The number of Add-Compare-Select (ACS) operations which occupy the dominant part of Viterbi decoding is considerably reduced due to branch eliminations, and fast decoding is realized by decoding asynchronously to received sequence. The reduction of the number of ACS operations is derived for the codes with rate 1/2. It is shown that the number of ACS operations is considerably reduced compared with the conventional Viterbi decoding. The bit error probability of the proposed decoding is derived for noiseless photon counting channel. It is also shown that the decoding technique can be applied to the cases using avalanche photo diode (APD) based receiver with dark current noise at a cost of negligible degradation on the bit error probability.

  • Optical Solitons for Signal Processing

    Stephen R. FRIBERG  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-A No:1
      Page(s):
    5-11

    We consider applications of optical solitons to signal processing. Soliton switching devices promise ultrafast operation and compatibility with communications systems using optical pulses. Quantum soliton effects include broadband squeezing and quantum nondemolition measurements, and can reduce noise and increase sensitivities of optical measurements. We report the demonstration of two-color soliton switching and describe progress towards implementation of quantum nondemolition measurement of photon number using soliton collisions.

  • Optical Solitons for Signal Processing

    Stephen R. FRIBERG  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-C No:1
      Page(s):
    3-9

    We consider applications of optical solitons to signal processing. Soliton switching devices promise ultrafast operation and compatibility with communications systems using optical pulses. Quantum soliton effects include broadband squeezing and quantum nondemolition measurements, and can reduce noise and increase sensitivities of optical measurements. We report the demonstration of two-color soliton switching and describe progress towards implementation of quantum nondemolition measurement of photon number using soliton collisions.

26241-26260hit(26286hit)