Open Physics (Feb 2024)

Optoelectronic–thermomagnetic effect of a microelongated non-local rotating semiconductor heated by pulsed laser with varying thermal conductivity

  • Raddadi Merfat H.,
  • El-Sapa Shreen,
  • Elamin Mahjoub A.,
  • Chtioui Houda,
  • Chteoui Riadh,
  • El-Bary Alaa A.,
  • Lotfy Khaled

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1515/phys-2023-0145
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 909 – 23

Abstract

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In this study, we investigated the effect of a rotation field and magnetic field on a homogeneous photo-thermoelastic nonlocal material and how its thermal conductivity changes as a result of a linearly distributed thermal load. The thermal conductivity of an interior particle is supposed to increase linearly with temperature under the impact of laser pulses. Microelastic (microelements distribution), non-local semiconductors are used to model the problem under optoelectronic procedures, as proposed by the thermoelasticity theory. According to the microelement transport processes, the micropolar-photo-thermoelasticity theory accounts for the medium’s microelongation properties. This mathematical model is solved in two dimensions using the harmonic wave analysis. Non-local semiconductor surfaces can generate completely dimensionless displacement, temperature, microelongation, carrier density, and stress components with the appropriate boundary conditions. The effects of thermal conductivity, thermal relaxation times, magnetic pressure effect, laser pulses, and rotation parameters on wave propagation in silicon (Si) material are investigated and graphically displayed for a range of values.

Keywords