2,672 research outputs found
Kondo physics in carbon nanotubes
The connection of electrical leads to wire-like molecules is a logical step
in the development of molecular electronics, but also allows studies of
fundamental physics. For example, metallic carbon nanotubes are quantum wires
that have been found to act as one-dimensional quantum dots, Luttinger-liquids,
proximity-induced superconductors and ballistic and diffusive one-dimensional
metals. Here we report that electrically-contacted single-wall nanotubes can
serve as powerful probes of Kondo physics, demonstrating the universality of
the Kondo effect. Arising in the prototypical case from the interaction between
a localized impurity magnetic moment and delocalized electrons in a metallic
host, the Kondo effect has been used to explain enhanced low-temperature
scattering from magnetic impurities in metals, and also occurs in transport
through semiconductor quantum dots. The far higher tunability of dots (in our
case, nanotubes) compared with atomic impurities renders new classes of
Kondo-like effects accessible. Our nanotube devices differ from previous
systems in which Kondo effects have been observed, in that they are
one-dimensional quantum dots with three-dimensional metal (gold) reservoirs.
This allows us to observe Kondo resonances for very large electron number (N)
in the dot, and approaching the unitary limit (where the transmission reaches
its maximum possible value). Moreover, we detect a previously unobserved Kondo
effect, occurring for even values of N in a magnetic field.Comment: 7 pages, pdf onl
Liver transplantation at the University of Pittsburgh, 1984 to 1990
This report updates patient and primary graft survival statistics for the liver transplantation program at the University of Pittsburgh for 1984 through 1990. Minimum follow-up for all patients is one year and only patients who received a primary liver graft in Pittsburgh are included. Recipients of multiple organ or multivisceral transplants, patients who received a primary graft at another center and were sent to Pittsburgh for rescue with FK506 or for retransplantation, and patients who underwent an extended resection (“cluster operation”) for cancer were excluded
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