The search functionality is under construction.
The search functionality is under construction.

Keyword Search Result

[Keyword] SC(4570hit)

4561-4570hit(4570hit)

  • Simulation of Stress Redistribution on LOCOS Structure during Oxidation and Subsequent Cooling Down

    Shigeki KURODA  Kenji NISHI  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-C No:2
      Page(s):
    145-149

    This paper is concerned with the stress simulation of a LOCOS structure during not only oxidation but also the subsequent cooling down based on viscoelastic stress modeling. A viscoelastic model is successfully applied to the oxide, nitride and silicon substrate for a LOCOS structure. Thermal stress is also taken into account during the cooling down process. The viscoelastic deformation problem of all the three materials for the LOCOS structure are solved by a two-dimensional finite element method. It is the first time to show that the stress values after cooling down to room temperature are much higher than those right after oxidation. It is also shown that varying the cooling down rates results in the different stress values after cooling down.

  • 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.

  • Translucent Multiuser Interface for Realtime Collaboration

    Hiroshi ISHII  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-A No:2
      Page(s):
    122-131

    The new notion of "multiuser interface", an interface for groups working together in a shared workspace, originated from the expansion of CSCW research and the spread of the groupware concept. This paper introduces a new multiuser interface design approach based on the translucent video overlay technique. This approach was realized in the multimedia desktop conference system Team WorkStation. Team WorkStation demonstrates that this translucent video overlay technique can achieve two different goals: (1) fused overlay for realizing the open shared workspace, and (2) selective overlay for effectively using limited screen space. This paper first describes the concept of open shared workspace and its implementation based on the fused overlay technique. The shared work window of Team-WorkStation is created by overlaying translucent individual workspace images. Each video layer is originally physically separated. However, because of the spatial relationships among marks on each layer, the set of overlaid layers provides users with sufficient semantics to fuse them into one image. The usefulness of this cognitive fusion was demonstrated through actual usage in design sessions. Second, the problem of screen space limitation is described. To solve this problem, the idea of ClearFace based on selective overlay is introduced. The ClearFace idea is to lay translucent live face video windows over a shared work window. Through the informal observations of experimental use in design sessions, little difficulty was experienced in switching the focus of attention between the face images and the drawing objects. The theory of selective looking accounts for this flexible perception mechanism. Although users can see drawn objects behind a face without difficulty, we found that users hesitate to draw figures or write text over face images. Because of this behavior, we devised the "movable" face window strategy.

  • Trouble Communication Model in a Software Development Project

    Mie NAKATANI  Shogo NISHIDA  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-A No:2
      Page(s):
    196-206

    This paper deals with communication model in a software development project when there happens some trouble on it. First, we analyze a communication process in the real projects, and investigate what type of communication exists and which aspect is thought to be important by the members of the projects. Then we propose a communication model based on the analysis. We focus on the communication in case of troubles, and the process is modeled using charge, competence and knowledge of each member in the project. The features of the model lies in the ability to simulate communication route dynamically. The results of the simulation is compared with the real data, and also the use of the model for communication support system is discussed.

  • 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.

  • A New MOS Linear Operational Transconductance Amplifier and Its Application to OTA-C Filters

    Takahiro INOUE  Fumio UENO  Mikio KAWASAKI  Yoshinori ARAMAKI  Sonoe NODA  

     
    PAPER-Integrated Electronics

      Vol:
    E75-C No:1
      Page(s):
    81-89

    A new MOS linear operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) for the up-to-4 MHz range OTA-C filters is proposed. The proposed OTA is designed using a new linearizing technique based on bias-current modulation, to compensate nonlinearities in the transfer characteristic of the conventional current-source-biased source-coupled pair. The design and SPICE simulation are presented in detail, assuming the implementation by the typical p-well CMOS process. The simulation of a 3.58 MHz OTA-C band-pass filter built with the proposed OTAs showed close agreement with the desired performance.

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

    Takayoshi KOBAYASHI  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-C No:1
      Page(s):
    36-43

    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(1))n both for the second (n2) and third-order (n3) 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.

  • Optimal Grain Size Determination for Tree-Structured Parallel Programs

    Tsuyoshi KAWAGUCHI  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E75-D No:1
      Page(s):
    35-43

    In this paper we study the problem of scheduling a tree-structured program on multiprocessors so as to minimize the total execution time, which includes communication delay between processors. It is assumed in the problem that a sufficiently large number of processors are available. It is known that if the program structures are restricted to be out-trees, the problem can be solved in O(n2) time, where n denotes the number of modules of a program. However, this problem is known to be NP-hard if the program structures are allowed to be in-trees. Up to now, no optimal algorithm, except an obvious one, was known for the latter case while some approximation algorithms were shown. We present an optimization algorithm with a nontrivial time bound O((1.52)nn log n) for the in-tree case.

  • 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.

  • 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.

4561-4570hit(4570hit)