Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gerry, Matthew, Wang, Jonathan J., Li, Joanna, Shein-Lumbroso, Ofir, Tal, Oren, Segal, Dvira
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2412.00288
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866913777346150400
author Gerry, Matthew
Wang, Jonathan J.
Li, Joanna
Shein-Lumbroso, Ofir
Tal, Oren
Segal, Dvira
author_facet Gerry, Matthew
Wang, Jonathan J.
Li, Joanna
Shein-Lumbroso, Ofir
Tal, Oren
Segal, Dvira
contents Delta-T shot noise is activated in temperature-biased electronic junctions, down to the atomic scale. It is characterized by a quadratic dependence on the temperature difference and a nonlinear relationship with the transmission coefficients of partially opened conduction channels. In this work, we demonstrate that delta-T noise, measured across an ensemble of atomic-scale junctions, can be utilized to estimate the temperature bias in these systems. Our approach employs a supervised machine learning algorithm to train a neural network with input features being the scaled electrical conductance, the delta-T noise, and the mean temperature. Due to limited experimental data, we generate synthetic datasets, designed to mimic experiments. The neural network, trained on these synthetic data, was subsequently applied to predict temperature biases from experimental datasets. Using performance metrics, we demonstrate that the mean bias -- the deviation of predicted temperature differences from their true value -- is less than 1 K for junctions with conductance up to 4$G_0$. Our study highlights that, while a single delta-T noise measurement is insufficient for accurately estimating the applied temperature bias due to noise contributions from other sources, averaging over an ensemble of junctions enables predictions within experimental uncertainties. This demonstrates that machine learning approaches can be utilized for estimation of temperature biases, and similarly other stimuli in electronic junctions.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2412_00288
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Machine learning delta-T noise for temperature bias estimation
Gerry, Matthew
Wang, Jonathan J.
Li, Joanna
Shein-Lumbroso, Ofir
Tal, Oren
Segal, Dvira
Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
Delta-T shot noise is activated in temperature-biased electronic junctions, down to the atomic scale. It is characterized by a quadratic dependence on the temperature difference and a nonlinear relationship with the transmission coefficients of partially opened conduction channels. In this work, we demonstrate that delta-T noise, measured across an ensemble of atomic-scale junctions, can be utilized to estimate the temperature bias in these systems. Our approach employs a supervised machine learning algorithm to train a neural network with input features being the scaled electrical conductance, the delta-T noise, and the mean temperature. Due to limited experimental data, we generate synthetic datasets, designed to mimic experiments. The neural network, trained on these synthetic data, was subsequently applied to predict temperature biases from experimental datasets. Using performance metrics, we demonstrate that the mean bias -- the deviation of predicted temperature differences from their true value -- is less than 1 K for junctions with conductance up to 4$G_0$. Our study highlights that, while a single delta-T noise measurement is insufficient for accurately estimating the applied temperature bias due to noise contributions from other sources, averaging over an ensemble of junctions enables predictions within experimental uncertainties. This demonstrates that machine learning approaches can be utilized for estimation of temperature biases, and similarly other stimuli in electronic junctions.
title Machine learning delta-T noise for temperature bias estimation
topic Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2412.00288