dragisto Posted June 26, 2018 Posted June 26, 2018 hi I started reading a text book called introduction to nanoscience by s m Lindsay and looking at the exercises and I am unsure what equation he was using to get the answer. the question was "what is the size of the current fluctuations (shot noise) in a current of 100PA[ over a counting period of 1 second? use e=1.6x10^-19." the working in the back says "given the fact that 1A=1C/s. (100pC/1s)*(1c/10^12 pC)*1=(1e-/1.6x10^-19c)=6.25x10^8e-/s" any help would be apprecieated.
studiot Posted June 26, 2018 Posted June 26, 2018 The standard equation is The mean square shot noise current, i, in a circuit carrying a current iA is given by i2 = 2eiAB where e is the charge on the electron and B is the bandwidth of the measuring equipment.
dragisto Posted June 27, 2018 Author Posted June 27, 2018 10 hours ago, studiot said: The standard equation is The mean square shot noise current, i, in a circuit carrying a current iA is given by i2 = 2eiAB where e is the charge on the electron and B is the bandwidth of the measuring equipment. ok right so the 100pC/1s=iaand e=e- I'm guessing then does the 1C/1012 pc *1/1.6x10-19c=2B at which point where does the 1012 come from and the 1.6x10-19 not cancel the e-?
studiot Posted June 28, 2018 Posted June 28, 2018 OK so here is my working. The question asks for a current change. So the units of this are amps. So looking at my equation this is the square root of the left hand side. On the right hand side we have a current times a charge times a bandwidth. The units of bandwidth are seconds-1 The units of charge are coulombs. So the right hand side is in amps *coulombs per second But coulombs per second is amps. So we have (amps)2 We are given e = 1.6x10-19 and iA = 100*10-12 amps and B = 1/1 second Substituting we have i2 = 2 * 1.6x10-19 * 100*10-12 =3.2x 10-29 = 32 x 10-28 i = √(32 x 10-28) =√(32) x 10-14 =0.06 x 10-12 amps = 0.06 picoamps
dragisto Posted June 28, 2018 Author Posted June 28, 2018 (edited) 16 minutes ago, studiot said: OK so here is my working. The question asks for a current change. So the units of this are amps. So looking at my equation this is the square root of the left hand side. On the right hand side we have a current times a charge times a bandwidth. The units of bandwidth are seconds-1 The units of charge are coulombs. So the right hand side is in amps *coulombs per second But coulombs per second is amps. So we have (amps)2 We are given e = 1.6x10-19 and iA = 100*10-12 amps and B = 1/1 second Substituting we have i2 = 2 * 1.6x10-19 * 100*10-12 =3.2x 10-29 = 32 x 10-28 i = √(32 x 10-28) =√(32) x 10-14 =0.06 x 10-12 amps = 0.06 picoamps ok that makes sense but the answer in the back is different to the one you've got there. "(100pC/1s)*(1c/10^12 pC)*1=(1e-/1.6x10^-19c)=6.25x10^8e-/s The shot noise is given by N^1/2 i.e. 2.5x10^4 e/s= 4x10^-15 A" this is what the book gives as the answer in the back. to get the answer in the book using your equation i'd need something to cancel the 2 while keeping the rest of the numbers the same. Edited June 28, 2018 by dragisto
studiot Posted June 28, 2018 Posted June 28, 2018 (edited) Sorry, you will have to ask you teacher about this, I don't know much about the use in nanotechnology. My equation comes from its use in electron ballistic devices (valves mainly). The only thing I can think of would be that it is balanced or two sided, whereas your app might be one sided ie all the variation is extra counts. This would account for a 2. I would be interested when you find out, though. Edited June 28, 2018 by studiot
dragisto Posted June 28, 2018 Author Posted June 28, 2018 it's fine, no worries I was just trying to figure out why it's written the way it is, perhaps it is balanced or two sided I just don't see it in the question itself. thanks for the assistance anyway though.
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