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Thermally stimulated current (TSC) spectroscopy (not to be confused with thermally stimulated depolarization current) is an experimental technique which is used to study energy levels in semiconductors or insulators (organic or inorganic). Energy levels are first filled either by optical or electrical injection usually at a relatively low ...
It can be used to measure the thermally stimulated depolarization of molecules within a material. One method of doing so is to place the material between two electrodes, cool the material in the presence of an external electric field, remove the field once a desired temperature has been reached, and measure the current between the electrodes as ...
Laser stimulation highlights differences in thermal characteristics between areas containing defects and areas which are defect-free. As the laser locally heats a defective area on a metal line which is carrying a current , the resulting resistance changes can be detected by monitoring the input current to the device.
Stimulated emission together with the principle of population inversion are at the heart of operation of lasers and masers. It has been shown by Einstein at the beginning of the twentieth century that if the excited and the ground level are non degenerate then the absorption rate W 12 {\displaystyle W_{12}} and the stimulated emission rate W 21 ...
Thermal laser stimulation; Thermally stimulated current spectroscopy; Time-domain reflectometer; Time-resolved photon emission; Transition metal dichalcogenide ...
Basing on experiences of the thermally stimulated current (TSC) spectroscopy, the current transients are analyzed with the DLTS methods (I-DLTS), where the light pulses are used for the defect occupancy disturbance.
Thermally stimulated depolarization current; Thermomechanical analysis; Time-resolved mass spectrometry; Total internal reflection fluorescence microscope; Transmission electron microscopy; Transmission electron microscopy DNA sequencing; Transmission Kikuchi diffraction; Two-dimensional correlation analysis
The amount of luminescence is proportional to the original dose of radiation received. In thermoluminescence dating, this can be used to date buried objects that have been heated in the past, since the ionizing dose received from radioactive elements in the soil or from cosmic rays is proportional to age.