What is the most insightful textbook about nanoelectronics you know of, regardless of how difficult it may be?
Or for another question trying to get at the same thing: if only one book about nanoelectronics were to be preserved (but standard physics books would all be fine still), which one would you want it to be? (I would be happy with a pair of books too, if that’s an easier question to answer.)
I come more from the physics side and less from the EE side, so for me it would be Datta’s “Electronic Transport in Mesoscopic Systems”, assuming the standard solid state books survive (Kittel, Ashcroft & Mermin, L&L stat mech, etc). For something closer to EE, I would say “Principles of Semiconductor Devices” by Zeghbroeck because it is what I have used and it was good, but I know less about that landscape.
What is the most insightful textbook about nanoelectronics you know of, regardless of how difficult it may be?
Or for another question trying to get at the same thing: if only one book about nanoelectronics were to be preserved (but standard physics books would all be fine still), which one would you want it to be? (I would be happy with a pair of books too, if that’s an easier question to answer.)
I come more from the physics side and less from the EE side, so for me it would be Datta’s “Electronic Transport in Mesoscopic Systems”, assuming the standard solid state books survive (Kittel, Ashcroft & Mermin, L&L stat mech, etc). For something closer to EE, I would say “Principles of Semiconductor Devices” by Zeghbroeck because it is what I have used and it was good, but I know less about that landscape.