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V. Damodara Das

Bio: V. Damodara Das is an academic researcher from Indian Institute of Technology Madras. The author has contributed to research in topics: Thin film & Electrical resistivity and conductivity. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 89 publications receiving 1145 citations.


Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the electrical resistance of Ag2Te films has been measured as a function of temperature during heating, which was carried out immediately after the film formation, and the observed exponential decrease of resistance with temperature up to the transition point points to the semiconducting nature of the low temperature polymorph of ag2Te.
Abstract: Thin films of Ag2Te of various thicknesses in the range 500–1500 A have been prepared by thermal evaporation of the compound under vacuum on clean glass substrates held at room temperature. The electrical resistance of the films has been measured as a function of temperature during heating, which was carried out immediately after the film formation. The observed exponential decrease of resistance with temperature up to the transition point points to the semiconducting nature of the low temperature polymorph of Ag2Te. The band gap of the low temperature phase is calculated for various thicknesses of the films and it is found that the band gap is a function of film thickness, increasing with decreasing thickness. The increase in the band gap, which was found to be inversely proportional to the square of the film thickness, is attributed to quantization of electron momentum component normal to film plane.

25 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the activation energy for conduction (in annealed films) is found to be thickness dependent and this can be explained with the help of the grain-boundary trapping model.
Abstract: thin films of different thicknesses were deposited by the flash evaporation method onto cleaned glass plates held at room temperature. Structural characterization was carried out using x-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy which revealed that the films are polycrystalline and the grain size increases with increasing thickness. Electrical resistivity was measured in the temperature range 300 - 450 K during two cycles of heating and cooling. During the first heating, irreversible behaviour of conductivity has been observed. Semiconductor-like behaviour has been observed in the annealed films and also during the first cooling and subsequent heating - cooling cycles. The activation energy for conduction (in annealed films) is found to be thickness dependent and this can be explained with the help of the grain-boundary trapping model. The thickness dependence of electrical resistivity (in annealed films) has been analysed using the effective mean free path model. From the analysis, important material constants like the mean free path and the electron concentration have been evaluated.

25 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the initial lattice distortion energy spectra of the films have been determined from the resistance-temperature data, and it is found that the resistivity values for films of different thicknesses are in good agreement with the size effect theory.

23 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, it was found that the electrical resistivity of the air-exposed films is much higher than that of the as-grown (unexposed) thin films.
Abstract: Thin films of PbTe of different thicknesses have been prepared on glass substrates at room temperature by vacuum deposition. It is found that the electrical resistivity of the air-exposed films is much higher (by about 2 to 3 orders of magnitude) than that of the as-grown (unexposed) thin films. The electrical resistivity temperature behaviours of both the air-exposed and as-grown (unexposed) thin films of PbTe are different but both show hysteresis behaviour during successive heating-cooling cycles. These observations can be explained by considering that the desorption of absorbed gas molecules (mainly oxygen) and creation of defects at higher temperatures during heating influence the electrical conduction. Further, the time factor involved in gas desorption-adsorption can cause the observed hysteresis in temperature-dependent conduction behaviour. The as-grown (unexposed) thin-film conductivity exhibits the expected reciprocal thickness dependence due to the thickness effect, but the air-exposed film conductivity does not. This can be explained to be due to the complete masking of the thickness effect by the gas adsorption effect in air-exposed film conductivity. The reciprocal thickness dependence observed in the case of unexposed film conductivity has been explained by the 'effective mean free path' model. The low value of the 'grain boundary' mean free path obtained by the analysis points to the fact that in polycrystalline films, grain boundary scattering is extensive and controls the film conductivity.

23 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the thermoelectric power of thin films in the above temperature range exhibits degenerate semiconductor behavior, this is, a linear increase in the temperature with rising temperature.
Abstract: ${\mathrm{Ag}}_{2}$Te thin films with thicknesses in the range 600---1400 \AA{} have been prepared by vacuum deposition at a pressure of 5 \ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{} ${10}^{\ensuremath{-}5}$ Torr on clean glass substrates held at room temperature. The thermoelectromotive force of these films has been measured in the temperature range 300---415 K, that is, below the phase-transition temperature. It is found that the thermoelectric power of ${\mathrm{Ag}}_{2}$Te thin films in the above temperature range exhibits degenerate semiconductor behavior, this is, a linear increase in the thermoelectric power with rising temperature. It is also found that the thermoelectric power obeys the inverse thickness dependence predicted by classical size-effect theories.

21 citations


Cited by
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TL;DR: In this paper, basic knowledge of thermoelectric materials and an overview of parameters that affect the figure of merit ZT are provided, as well as the prospects for the optimization and their applications are also discussed.
Abstract: Developing thermoelectric materials with superior performance means tailoring interrelated thermoelectric physical parameters – electrical conductivities, Seebeck coefficients, and thermal conductivities – for a crystalline system. High electrical conductivity, low thermal conductivity, and a high Seebeck coefficient are desirable for thermoelectric materials. Therefore, knowledge of the relation between electrical conductivity and thermal conductivity is essential to improve thermoelectric properties. In general, research in recent years has focused on developing thermoelectric structures and materials of high efficiency. The importance of this parameter is universally recognized; it is an established, ubiquitous, routinely used tool for material, device, equipment and process characterization both in the thermoelectric industry and in research. In this paper, basic knowledge of thermoelectric materials and an overview of parameters that affect the figure of merit ZT are provided. The prospects for the optimization of thermoelectric materials and their applications are also discussed.

663 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
25 Jul 1996-Nature
TL;DR: In this article, the primordial fireball was simulated using a neutron-induced nuclear reaction to heat small regions of liquid 3He above the superfluid transition temperature, leading to the formation of a random network of vortices (the superfluid analogue of cosmic strings).
Abstract: TOPOLOGICAL defects formed during a rapid symmetry-breaking phase transition in the early Universe1,2 could be responsible for seeding large-scale structure, for the anisotropy of the microwave background radiation, and for the predominance of matter over antimatter3,4. The theory describing this cosmological phase transition is formally analogous to that describing the transition to the superfluid state in liquid 3He, so that in principle the process of cosmological defect formation can be modelled in the laboratory. Here we report the results of an experiment in which the 'primordial fireball' is mimicked using a neutron-induced nuclear reaction (n + 3He → p + 3He + 0.76 MeV) to heat small regions of superfluid 3He above the superfluid transition temperature. These bubbles of normal liquid cool extremely rapidly, and we find that their transition back to the superfluid state is accompanied by the formation of a random network of vortices (the superfluid analogue of cosmic strings). We monitor the evolution of this defect state by rotating the superfluid sample, allowing vortices to escape from the network and thus be probed individually. Our results provide clear confirmation of the idea that topological defects form at a rapid second-order phase transition, and give quantitative support to the Kibble–Zurek mechanism5,6 of cosmological defect formation.

411 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors characterized the optical absorption properties of Ge2Sb2Te5 in its amorphous, face-centered-cubic, and hexagonal phases, and explained the origins of inconsistent or unphysical results in previous reports.
Abstract: Ge–Sb–Te alloys are widely used for data recording based on the rapid and reversible amorphous-to-crystalline phase transformation that is accompanied by increases in the optical reflectivity and the electrical conductivity. However, uncertainties about the optical band gaps and electronic transport properties of these phases have persisted because of inappropriate interpretation of reported data and the lack of definitive analytical studies. In this paper we characterize the most widely used composition, Ge2Sb2Te5, in its amorphous, face-centered-cubic, and hexagonal phases, and explain the origins of inconsistent or unphysical results in previous reports. The optical absorption in all of these phases follows the relationship αhν∝(hν−Egopt)2, which corresponds to the optical transitions in most amorphous semiconductors as proposed by Tauc, Grigorovici, and Vancu [Tauc et al., Phys. Status Solidi 15, 627 (1966)], and to those in indirect-gap crystalline semiconductors. The optical band gaps of the amorpho...

387 citations

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TL;DR: In this review, the current progress on ink formulation of two-dimensional materials and the printable applications enabled by them are summarized and perspectives on their research and technological future prospects are presented.
Abstract: Graphene and related two-dimensional materials provide an ideal platform for next generation disruptive technologies and applications. Exploiting these solution-processed two-dimensional materials in printing can accelerate this development by allowing additive patterning on both rigid and conformable substrates for flexible device design and large-scale, high-speed, cost-effective manufacturing. In this review, we summarise the current progress on ink formulation of two-dimensional materials and the printable applications enabled by them. We also present our perspectives on their research and technological future prospects.

371 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Analysis of ferromagnetic resonance data shows that high particle concentrations correlate with increasing chain length producing decreasing SLP, and a theoretical model describing dipole interactions valid for the linear response regime is proposed, predicting optimum particle sizes for hyperthermia to about 30% smaller than those previously predicted, depending on the nanoparticle parameters and chain size.
Abstract: Nanostructured magnetic systems have many applications, including potential use in cancer therapy deriving from their ability to heat in alternating magnetic fields. In this work we explore the influence of particle chain formation on the normalized heating properties, or specific loss power (SLP) of both low- (spherical) and high- (parallelepiped) anisotropy ferrite-based magnetic fluids. Analysis of ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) data shows that high particle concentrations correlate with increasing chain length producing decreasing SLP. Monte Carlo simulations corroborate the FMR results. We propose a theoretical model describing dipole interactions valid for the linear response regime to explain the observed trends. This model predicts optimum particle sizes for hyperthermia to about 30% smaller than those previously predicted, depending on the nanoparticle parameters and chain size. Also, optimum chain lengths depended on nanoparticle surface-to-surface distance. Our results might have important implications to cancer treatment and could motivate new strategies to optimize magnetic hyperthermia.

323 citations