Opportunities for mesoscopics in thermometry and refrigeration: Physics and applications
Francesco Giazotto, Tero T. Heikkila, Arttu Luukanen, Alexander M., Savin, and Jukka P. Pekola

TL;DR
This review explores the thermal properties of mesoscopic structures at low temperatures, focusing on electron energy distribution control for thermometry and refrigeration, with applications in ultrasensitive radiation detection.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of mesoscopic thermometry and refrigeration, emphasizing nonequilibrium phenomena and device fabrication methods at temperatures below 4 K.
Findings
Observation of nonequilibrium electron distributions
Development of mesoscopic refrigeration devices
Enhanced sensitivity in radiation detection
Abstract
This review presents an overview of the thermal properties of mesoscopic structures. The discussion is based on the concept of electron energy distribution, and, in particular, on controlling and probing it. The temperature of an electron gas is determined by this distribution: refrigeration is equivalent to narrowing it, and thermometry is probing its convolution with a function characterizing the measuring device. Temperature exists, strictly speaking, only in quasiequilibrium in which the distribution follows the Fermi-Dirac form. Interesting nonequilibrium deviations can occur due to slow relaxation rates of the electrons, e.g., among themselves or with lattice phonons. Observation and applications of nonequilibrium phenomena are also discussed. The focus in this paper is at low temperatures, primarily below 4 K, where physical phenomena on mesoscopic scales and hybrid combinations…
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