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In recent years the mathematical modeling of charge transport in
semi conductors has become a thriving area in applied mathematics.
The drift diffusion equations, which constitute the most popular
model for the simula tion of the electrical behavior of
semiconductor devices, are by now mathe matically quite well
understood. As a consequence numerical methods have been developed,
which allow for reasonably efficient computer simulations in many
cases of practical relevance. Nowadays, research on the drift diffu
sion model is of a highly specialized nature. It concentrates on
the explora tion of possibly more efficient discretization methods
(e.g. mixed finite elements, streamline diffusion), on the
improvement of the performance of nonlinear iteration and linear
equation solvers, and on three dimensional applications. The
ongoing miniaturization of semiconductor devices has prompted a
shift of the focus of the modeling research lately, since the drift
diffusion model does not account well for charge transport in ultra
integrated devices. Extensions of the drift diffusion model (so
called hydrodynamic models) are under investigation for the
modeling of hot electron effects in submicron MOS-transistors, and
supercomputer technology has made it possible to employ kinetic
models (semiclassical Boltzmann-Poisson and Wigner Poisson
equations) for the simulation of certain highly integrated
devices."
In recent years the mathematical modeling of charge transport in
semi conductors has become a thriving area in applied mathematics.
The drift diffusion equations, which constitute the most popular
model for the simula tion of the electrical behavior of
semiconductor devices, are by now mathe matically quite well
understood. As a consequence numerical methods have been developed,
which allow for reasonably efficient computer simulations in many
cases of practical relevance. Nowadays, research on the drift diffu
sion model is of a highly specialized nature. It concentrates on
the explora tion of possibly more efficient discretization methods
(e.g. mixed finite elements, streamline diffusion), on the
improvement of the performance of nonlinear iteration and linear
equation solvers, and on three dimensional applications. The
ongoing miniaturization of semiconductor devices has prompted a
shift of the focus of the modeling research lately, since the drift
diffusion model does not account well for charge transport in ultra
integrated devices. Extensions of the drift diffusion model (so
called hydrodynamic models) are under investigation for the
modeling of hot electron effects in submicron MOS-transistors, and
supercomputer technology has made it possible to employ kinetic
models (semiclassical Boltzmann-Poisson and Wigner Poisson
equations) for the simulation of certain highly integrated
devices."
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