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1.
Small ; 11(26): 3119-23, 2015 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25767070

RESUMO

Photodetectors based on quasi-metallic carbon nanotubes exhibit unique optoelectronic properties. Due to their small bandgap, photocurrent generation is possible at room temperature. The origin of this photocurrent is investigated to determine the underlying mechanism, which can be photothermoelectric effect or photovoltaic effect, depending on the bandgap magnitude of the quasi-metallic nanotube.

2.
Nano Lett ; 14(5): 2426-30, 2014 May 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24758201

RESUMO

We investigate the role of weak clamping forces, typically assumed to be infinite, in carbon nanotube mechanical resonators. Due to these forces, we observe a hysteretic clamping and unclamping of the nanotube device that results in a discrete drop in the mechanical resonance frequency on the order of 5-20 MHz, when the temperature is cycled between 340 and 375 K. This instability in the resonant frequency results from the nanotube unpinning from the electrode/trench sidewall where it is bound weakly by van der Waals forces. Interestingly, this unpinning does not affect the Q-factor of the resonance, since the clamping is still governed by van der Waals forces above and below the unpinning. For a 1 µm device, the drop observed in resonance frequency corresponds to a change in nanotube length of approximately 50-65 nm. On the basis of these findings, we introduce a new model, which includes a finite tension around zero gate voltage due to van der Waals forces and shows better agreement with the experimental data than the perfect clamping model. From the gate dependence of the mechanical resonance frequency, we extract the van der Waals clamping force to be 1.8 pN. The mechanical resonance frequency exhibits a striking temperature dependence below 200 K attributed to a temperature-dependent slack arising from the competition between the van der Waals force and the thermal fluctuations in the suspended nanotube.

3.
Nano Lett ; 13(11): 5129-34, 2013 Nov 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24127786

RESUMO

We investigate the electronic and optoelectronic properties of quasi-metallic nanotube pn-devices, which have smaller band gaps than most known bulk semiconductors. These carbon nanotube-based devices deviate from conventional bulk semiconductor device behavior due to their low-dimensional nature. We observe rectifying behavior based on Zener tunneling of ballistic carriers instead of ideal diode behavior, as limited by the diffusive transport of carriers. We observe substantial photocurrents at room temperature, suggesting that these quasi-metallic pn-devices may have a broader impact in optoelectronic devices. A new technique based on photocurrent spectroscopy is presented to identify the unique chirality of nanotubes in a functional device. This chirality information is crucial in obtaining a theoretical understanding of the underlying device physics that depends sensitively on nanotube chirality, as is the case for quasi-metallic nanotube devices. A detailed model is developed to fit the observed I-V characteristics, which enables us to verify the band gap from these measurements as well as the dimensions of the insulating tunneling barrier region.

4.
ACS Nano ; 9(5): 5372-6, 2015 May 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25961803

RESUMO

We report an experimental measurement of the acoustic signal emitted from an individual suspended carbon nanotube (CNT) approximate 2 µm in length, 1 nm in diameter, and 10(-21) kg in mass. This system represents the smallest thermoacoustic system studied to date. By applying an AC voltage of 1.4 V at 8 kHz to the suspended CNT, we are able to detect the acoustic signal using a commercial microphone. The acoustic power detected is found to span a range from 0.1 to 2.4 attoWatts or 0.2 to 1 µPa of sound pressure. This corresponds to thermoacoustic efficiencies ranging from 0.007 to 0.6 Pa/W for the seven devices that were measured in this study. Here, the small lateral dimensions of these devices cause large heat losses due to thermal conduction, which result in the relatively small observed thermoacoustic efficiencies.

5.
ACS Nano ; 9(12): 11551-6, 2015 Dec 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26498635

RESUMO

We present a comparative study of quasi-metallic (Eg ∼ 100 meV) and semiconducting (Eg ∼ 1 eV) suspended carbon nanotube pn-junctions introduced by electrostatic gating. While the built-in fields of the quasi-metallic carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are 1-2 orders of magnitude smaller than those of the semiconducting CNTs, their photocurrent is 2 orders of magnitude higher than the corresponding semiconducting CNT devices under the same experimental conditions. Here, the large exciton binding energy in semiconducting nanotubes (∼400 meV) makes it difficult for excitons to dissociate into free carriers that can contribute to an externally measured photocurent. As such, semiconducting nanotubes require a phonon to assist in the exciton dissociation process, in order to produce a finite photocurrent, while quasi-metallic nanotubes do not. The quasi-metallic nanotubes have much lower exciton binding energies (∼50 meV) as well as a continuum of electronic states to decay into and, therefore, do not require the absorption of a phonon in order to dissociate, making it much easier for these excitons to produce a photocurrent. We performed detailed simulations of the band energies in quasi-metallic and semiconducting nanotube devices in order to obtain the electric field profiles along the lengths of the nanotubes. These simulations predict maximum built-in electric field strengths of 2.3 V/µm for semiconducting and 0.032-0.22 V/µm for quasi-metallic nanotubes under the applied gate voltages used in this study.

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