Domínguez-Adame, FranciscoSánchez, AngelDiez, Enrique2012-09-062012-09-061994-12-15Physical Review B, vol. 50, n. 23, 15 dec. 1994. Pp. 17 736–17 7391098-0121 (print version)1550-235X (online version)https://hdl.handle.net/10016/15221We theoretically study electron transport in disordered, quantum-well-based, semiconductor superlattices with structural short-range correlations. Our system consists of equal-width square barriers and quantum wells with two different thicknesses. The two kinds of quantum wells are randomly distributed along the growth direction. Structural correlations are introduced by adding the constraint that one of the wells always appears in pairs. We show that such correlated disordered superlattices exhibit a strong enhancement of their dc conductance as compared to usual random ones, giving rise to quasi-ballistic-electron transport. Interestingly, this phenomenon is also detected in superlattices with random fluctuations of the well thicknesses. Our predictions can be used to demonstrate experimentally that structural correlations inhibit the localization effects of disorder and, most important, that it should be clearly observed even in the presence of imperfectionsapplication/pdfengQuasi-ballistic-electron transport in random superlatticesresearch articleMatemáticas10.1103/PhysRevB.50.17736open access