Optical Modulation Effects on Nonlinear Electron Transport in Graphene in Terahertz Frequency Range
Danhong Huang, Godfrey Gumbs, and O. Roslyak

TL;DR
This paper investigates how optical modulation influences nonlinear electron transport in graphene nanoribbons at terahertz frequencies, revealing threshold behaviors, mobility enhancements, and the effects of edge roughness and electron heating.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent device model combining Boltzmann equations and electromagnetics to analyze fast carrier dynamics under optical modulation in graphene transistors.
Findings
Mobility exhibits a threshold dependent on temperature, electron density, and edge roughness.
Enhanced mobility occurs due to high-energy electron states but is limited by phonon scattering.
High-field edge roughness scattering increases with decreasing correlation length.
Abstract
We describe very fast electron dynamics for a graphene nanoribbon driven by a control electromagnetic field in the terahertz regime. The mobility as a function of bias possesses a large threshold value when entering a nonlinear transport regime. This value depends on the temperature, electron density, impurity scattering strength, nanoribbon width and correlation length for the line-edge roughness. An enhanced electron mobility beyond this threshold has been observed, which is related to the initially-heated electrons in high energy states with a larger group velocity. However, this mobility enhancement quickly reaches a maximum governed by the Fermi velocity in graphene and the dramatically increased phonon scattering. Super-linear and sub-linear temperature dependences of the mobility are seen in the linear and nonlinear transport regimes, which is attributed separately to the results…
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