Flashing electron ratchets oscillate a periodic asymmetric potential to rectify nondirectional forces and thereby produce directional transport of electrons with zero source-drain bias. The relationship between the oscillation frequency of the potential and the ratchet (short-circuit) current reflects microscopic mechanisms of charge transport within the device. This paper describes experimental mappings of the “optimal frequency(ies)” of the ratchet fpeak—the oscillation frequencies that produce the largest ratchet current—to the carrier concentration, nh, and to the linear field effect transistor mobility, μh, for a poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl) (P3HT) transport layer. Measurements on multiple devices, multiple P3HT films per device, an...
Ratcheting is a mechanism that produces directional transport of particles by rectifying nondirectio...
The possibility to extract work from periodic, undirected forces has intrigued scientists for over a...
Asymmetrical periodic ('ratchet') potential energy structures have a number of applications, includi...
Flashing electron ratchets oscillate a periodic asymmetric potential to rectify nondirectional force...
The scaling of the characteristic frequencies of electronic ratchets operating in a flashing mode is...
Electron ratchets are non-equilibrium electronic devices that break inversion symmetry to produce cu...
Electronic ratchets use a periodic potential with broken inversion symmetry to rectify undirected (e...
Random and undirected forces are rectified in biological and synthetic systems using ratcheting mech...
Organic electronic ratchets rectify time-correlated external driving forces, giving output powers th...
Ratchet effect, which has been observed in many systems ranging from a living organism to an artific...
Ratchets are devices that are able to rectify an otherwise oscillatory behavior by exploiting an asy...
Ratchets are devices that are able to rectify an otherwise oscillatory behavior by exploiting an asy...
Rectification current in overdamped ratchets can be easily controlled by applying two driving signal...
Ratcheting is a mechanism that produces directional transport of particles by rectifying nondirectio...
The possibility to extract work from periodic, undirected forces has intrigued scientists for over a...
Asymmetrical periodic ('ratchet') potential energy structures have a number of applications, includi...
Flashing electron ratchets oscillate a periodic asymmetric potential to rectify nondirectional force...
The scaling of the characteristic frequencies of electronic ratchets operating in a flashing mode is...
Electron ratchets are non-equilibrium electronic devices that break inversion symmetry to produce cu...
Electronic ratchets use a periodic potential with broken inversion symmetry to rectify undirected (e...
Random and undirected forces are rectified in biological and synthetic systems using ratcheting mech...
Organic electronic ratchets rectify time-correlated external driving forces, giving output powers th...
Ratchet effect, which has been observed in many systems ranging from a living organism to an artific...
Ratchets are devices that are able to rectify an otherwise oscillatory behavior by exploiting an asy...
Ratchets are devices that are able to rectify an otherwise oscillatory behavior by exploiting an asy...
Rectification current in overdamped ratchets can be easily controlled by applying two driving signal...
Ratcheting is a mechanism that produces directional transport of particles by rectifying nondirectio...
The possibility to extract work from periodic, undirected forces has intrigued scientists for over a...
Asymmetrical periodic ('ratchet') potential energy structures have a number of applications, includi...