DocumentCode :
815133
Title :
Noise-Enhanced Detection of Subthreshold Signals With Carbon Nanotubes
Author :
Lee, Ian ; Liu, Xiaolei ; Zhou, Chongwu ; Kosko, Bart
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Univ. of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA
Volume :
5
Issue :
6
fYear :
2006
Firstpage :
613
Lastpage :
627
Abstract :
Electrical noise can help pulse-train signal detection at the nanolevel. Experiments on a single-walled carbon nanotube transistor confirmed that a threshold exhibited stochastic resonance (SR) for finite-variance and infinite-variance noise: small amounts of noise enhanced the nanotube detector´s performance. The experiments used a carbon nanotube field-effect transistor to detect noisy subthreshold electrical signals. Two new SR hypothesis tests in the Appendix also confirmed the SR effect in the nanotube transistor. Three measures of detector performance showed the SR effect: Shannon´s mutual information, the normalized correlation measure, and an inverted bit error rate compared the input and output discrete-time random sequences. The nanotube detector had a threshold-like input-output characteristic in its gate effect. It produced little current for subthreshold digital input voltages that fed the transistor´s gate. Three types of synchronized white noise corrupted the subthreshold Bernoulli sequences that fed the detector. The Gaussian, the uniform, and the impulsive Cauchy noise combined with the random input voltage sequences to help the detector produce random output current sequences. The experiments observed the SR effect by measuring how well an output sequence matched its input sequence. Shannon´s mutual information used histograms to estimate the probability densities and computed the entropies. The correlation measure was a scalar inner product of the input and output sequences. The inverted bit error rate computed how often the bits matched between the input and output sequences. The observed nanotube SR effect was robust: it persisted even when infinite-variance Cauchy noise corrupted the signal stream. Such noise-enhanced signal processing at the nanolevel promises applications to signal detection in wideband communication systems and biological and artificial neural networks
Keywords :
Gaussian noise; carbon nanotubes; error statistics; field effect transistors; impulse noise; nanotube devices; sequences; signal detection; white noise; C; Gaussian noise; Kolmogorov-Smirnov statistics; Shannon mutual information; artificial neural networks; carbon nanotube field-effect transistor; discrete-time random sequences; electrical noise; finite-variance noise; impulsive Cauchy noise; infinite-variance Cauchy noise; inverted bit error rate; nanotechnology; nanotube detector; noise processing; noise-enhanced detection; noise-enhanced signal processing; probability density; pulse-train signal detection; random input voltage; random output current sequences; single-walled carbon nanotube transistor; stochastic processes; stochastic resonance; subthreshold Bernoulli sequences; subthreshold digital input voltages; subthreshold signals; white noise; wideband communication systems; Bit error rate; Carbon nanotubes; Detectors; Impedance matching; Mutual information; Nanobioscience; Signal detection; Stochastic resonance; Strontium; Voltage; Antenna arrays; Kolmogorov–Smirnov statistics; carbon nanotube field-effect transistors (FETs); communication systems; correlation; detectors; infinite-variance noise; nanotechnology; noise processing; signal processing; stochastic processes; stochastic resonance (SR); stochastic resonance (SR) hypothesis tests; threshold detection;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Nanotechnology, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1536-125X
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TNANO.2006.883476
Filename :
4011931
Link To Document :
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