18,419 research outputs found

    Dataset for 'Nanoscale modeling of electro-plasmonic tunable devices for modulators and metasurfaces'

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    Datapoints of the published graphs in: Riedel, C., De Groot, C., Muskens, O., and Sun, K. (2017). Nanoscale modeling of electro-plasmonic tunable devices for modulators and metasurfaces. Optics Express.</span

    van der Veen (Sytze). Groot-Nederland & Groot-Colombia 1815-1830. De droom van Willem I, 2015

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    Tamse C. A. van der Veen (Sytze). Groot-Nederland & Groot-Colombia 1815-1830. De droom van Willem I, 2015. In: Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, tome 94, fasc. 2, 2016. Histoire Médiévale, Moderne et Contemporaine – Middleleeuwse, Moderne en Hedendaagse Geschiedenis. pp. 574-575

    Asymmetric gate induced drain leakage and body leakage in vertical MOSFETs with reduced parasitic capacitance

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    Vertical MOSFETs, unlike conventional planar MOSFETs, do not have identical structures at the source and drain, but have very different gate overlaps and geometric configurations. This paper investigates the effect of the asymmetric source and drain geometries of surround-gate vertical MOSFETs on the drain leakage currents in the OFF-state region of operation. Measurements of gate-induced drain leakage (GIDL) and body leakage are carried out as a function of temperature for transistors connected in the drain-on-top and drain-on-bottom configurations. Asymmetric leakage currents are seen when the source and drain terminals are interchanged, with the GIDL being higher in the drain-on-bottom configuration and the body leakage being higher in the drain-on-top configuration. Band-to-band tunneling is identified as the dominant leakage mechanism for both the GIDL and body leakage from electrical measurements at temperatures ranging from ?50 to 200?C. The asymmetric body leakage is explained by a difference in body doping concentration at the top and bottom drain–body junctions due to the use of a p-well ion implantation. The asymmetric GIDL is explained by the difference in gate oxide thickness on the vertical (110) pillar sidewalls and the horizontal (100) wafer surface

    Jeldert Jansz Groot: Beknopt en Getrouw Verhaal, van de Reys van Commandeur Jeldert Jansz Groot, uit Texel na en in Groenland [ca. 1779]

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    Beknopt en Getrouw Verhaal, van de Reys van Commandeur Jeldert Jansz Groot, uit Texel na en in Groenland &c. Deszelfs Verblyf op de Kust van Oud-Groenland, naa het Verongelukken van deszelfs onderhebbend Schip, tusschen Ysland en Staatenhoek. Voorgevallen in Ao. 1777 en 1778. Gedrukt voor den Autheur, En te bekomen by de Wed. van A. van Ryschooten en Zoon, op de Haarlemmerdyk, by de Kleine Vismarkt, te Amsterdam; En by Pieter Quakkelstein, te Zaandam. [c. 1779

    Quere, (Mrs) A C De Groot, [No Service Number]

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/412034Surname: QUERE. Given Name(s) or Initials: (MRS) A C DE GROOT. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: [No Registration Number]. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 25521.227952 Item: [2016.0049.44298] "Quere, (Mrs) A C De Groot, [No Service Number]

    Uralic Essive and the Expression of Impermanent State

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    This volume is the first book length study into the essive, a relatively unknown case marker like English ‘as (a child)’. It focuses on the distribution of the essive in contemporary Uralic languages with special attention to the opposition between permanent and impermanent state. The volume presents large sets of new data and insights into the use of the essive in nineteen Uralic languages on the basis of a typological linguistic questionnaire. The typological variation is discussed within the linguistic domains of non-verbal main predication, secondary predication, complementation, and manner, temporal, and circumstantial adverbial phrases. The descriptions and analyses are presented in such a way that they are accessible to linguists in general, descriptive and theoretical linguists, and specialists in Uralic and/or linguistic typology. The data and approach offer many starting points for further investigations within but also outside the Uralic language family
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