373 research outputs found
Carbon Nanotube Based Bearing for Rotational Motions
We report the fabrication of a nanoelectromechanical system consisting of a
plate rotating around a multiwalled nanotube bearing. The motion is possible
thanks to the low intershell friction. Indeed, the nanotube has been engineered
so that the sliding happens between different shells. The plate rotation is
activated electrostatically with stator electrodes. The static friction force
is estimated at N/\AA.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Beyond the Linearity of Current-Voltage Characteristics in Multiwalled Carbon Nanotubes
We present local and non-local electron transport measurements on individual
multi-wall nanotubes for bias voltage between 0 and about 4 V. Local
current-voltage characteristics are quite linear. In contrast, non-local
measurements are highly non-linear; the differential non-local conductance can
even become negative in the high-bias regime. We discuss the relationship
between these results and transport parameters such as the elastic length, the
number of current carrying shells, and the number of conducting modes.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Geometrical Dependence of High-Bias Current in Multiwalled Carbon Nanotubes
We have studied the high-bias transport properties of the different shells
that constitute a multiwalled carbon nanotube. The current is shown to be
reduced as the shell diameter is decreased or the length is increased. We
assign this geometrical dependence to the competition between electron-phonon
scattering process and Zener tunneling.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Multi-wall carbon nanotubes as quantum dots
We have measured the differential conductance dI/dV of individual multi-wall
carbon nanotubes (MWNT) of different lengths. A cross-over from wire-like (long
tubes) to dot-like (short tubes) behavior is observed. dI/dV is dominated by
random conductance fluctuations (UCF) in long MWNT devices (L=2...7 ),
while Coulomb blockade and energy level quantization are observed in short ones
(L=300 nm). The electron levels of short MWNT dots are nearly four-fold
degenerate (including spin) and their evolution in magnetic field (Zeeman
splitting) agrees with a g-factor of 2. In zero magnetic field the sequential
filling of states evolves with spin S according to S=0 -> 1/2 -> 0... In
addition, a Kondo enhancement of the conductance is observed when the number of
electrons on the tube is odd.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Four-point resistance of individual single-wall carbon nanotubes
We have studied the resistance of single-wall carbon nanotubes measured in a
four-point configuration with noninvasive voltage electrodes. The voltage drop
is detected using multiwalled carbon nanotubes while the current is injected
through nanofabricated Au electrodes. The resistance at room temperature is
shown to be linear with the length as expected for a classical resistor. This
changes at cryogenic temperature; the four-point resistance then depends on the
resistance at the Au-tube interfaces and can even become negative due to
quantum-interference effects.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Determination of the Intershell Conductance in Multiwalled Carbon Nanotubes
We report on the intershell electron transport in multiwalled carbon
nanotubes (MWNT). To do this, local and nonlocal four-point measurements are
used to study the current path through the different shells of a MWNT. For
short electrode separations 1 m the current mainly flows
through the two outer shells, described by a resistive transmission line with
an intershell conductance per length of ~(10 k\Omega)^{-1}/m. The
intershell transport is tunnel-type and the transmission is consistent with the
estimate based on the overlap between -orbitals of neighboring shells.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Mechanical detection of carbon nanotube resonator vibrations
Bending-mode vibrations of carbon nanotube resonator devices were
mechanically detected in air at atmospheric pressure by means of a novel
scanning force microscopy method. The fundamental and higher order bending
eigenmodes were imaged at up to 3.1GHz with sub-nanometer resolution in
vibration amplitude. The resonance frequency and the eigenmode shape of
multi-wall nanotubes are consistent with the elastic beam theory for a doubly
clamped beam. For single-wall nanotubes, however, resonance frequencies are
significantly shifted, which is attributed to fabrication generating, for
example, slack. The effect of slack is studied by pulling down the tube with
the tip, which drastically reduces the resonance frequency
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