Analysis of Microelectronic and Photonic Structuresn
 A very general and versatile computer simulation tool for the analysis of device physics and device design.
   
Search  |  Contact Us   
 

What is AMPS?
AMPS stands for Analysis of Microelectronic and Photonic Structures. It was engineered to be a very general and versatile computer simulation tool for the analysis of device physics and device design. It is a one-dimensional (1-D) device physics code which is applicable to any two terminal device. It can be for diode, sensor, photo-diode, and photovoltaic device analysis.

Brief History
AMPS was developed by Prof. Stephen Fonash and a number of his and post-doctorate students at The Pennsylvania State University under the sponsorship of the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI). Under EPRI support the AMPS-1D project was initiated and developed for the UNIX operating system. A few years later, there was a demand for AMPS-1D on PCs. Hence, a PC version was developed for the OS/2 operating system.

Originally the PC versions were UNIX and OS/2 with text-based interfaces.

Current operating systems compatibility
For assistance in using AMPS with Windows 7 or 8 operating systems, please see the video at:
http://youtu.be/9jhs-UFZ_ZM

Cases of AMPS
There are a number of examples in the Examples section showing how AMPS may be used. Additional
examples - with explanation of the physics - may be found in Prof. Fonash's book "Solar Cell Device Physics," Elsevier, 2010.

Acknowledgement
AMPS was developed at The Pennsylvania State University under the support of the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI).

Authors
AMPS-1D is the creation of Professor Stephen Fonash and the following students and visiting scholars: John Arch, Joe Cuiffi, Jingya Hou, William Howland, Peter McElheny, Anthony Moquin, Michael Rogosky, Francisco Rubinelli, Thi Tran and Hong Zhu.

 Contact Us | Home Page | Back to Top