14,979 research outputs found
Levitated Spinning Graphene
A method is described for levitating micron-sized few layer graphene flakes
in a quadrupole ion trap. Starting from a liquid suspension containing
graphene, charged flakes are injected into the trap using the electrospray
ionization technique and are probed optically. At micro-torr pressures, torques
from circularly polarized light cause the levitated particles to rotate at
frequencies >1 MHz, which can be inferred from modulation of light scattering
off the rotating flake when an electric field resonant with the rotation rate
is applied. Possible applications of these techniques will be presented, both
to fundamental measurements of the mechanical and electronic properties of
graphene and to new approaches to graphene crystal growth, modification and
manipulation.Comment: 23 pages, 11 figure
Knowledge Economy Immigration: A Priority for U.S. Growth Policy
Offers economic and political arguments for facilitating immigration of highly educated, skilled workers as a way to support long-term knowledge-based economic growth. Proposes granting green cards to math and science graduates of qualified U.S. colleges
Symplectic-energy-momentum preserving variational integrators
The purpose of this paper is to develop variational integrators for conservative mechanical systems that are symplectic and energy and momentum conserving. To do this, a space–time view of variational integrators is employed and time step adaptation is used to impose the constraint of conservation of energy. Criteria for the solvability of the time steps and some numerical examples are given
Detection of a single-charge defect in a metal-oxide-semiconductor structure using vertically coupled Al and Si single-electron transistors
An Al-AlO_x-Al single-electron transistor (SET) acting as the gate of a
narrow (~ 100 nm) metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET)
can induce a vertically aligned Si SET at the Si/SiO_2 interface near the
MOSFET channel conductance threshold. By using such a vertically coupled Al and
Si SET system, we have detected a single-charge defect which is tunnel-coupled
to the Si SET. By solving a simple electrostatic model, the fractions of each
coupling capacitance associated with the defect are extracted. The results
reveal that the defect is not a large puddle or metal island, but its size is
rather small, corresponding to a sphere with a radius less than 1 nm. The small
size of the defect suggests it is most likely a single-charge trap at the
Si/SiO_2 interface. Based on the ratios of the coupling capacitances, the
interface trap is estimated to be about 20 nm away from the Si SET.Comment: 5 pages and 5 figure
Electron Interactions and Scaling Relations for Optical Excitations in Carbon Nanotubes
Recent fluorescence spectroscopy experiments on single wall carbon nanotubes
reveal substantial deviations of observed absorption and emission energies from
predictions of noninteracting models of the electronic structure. Nonetheless,
the data for nearly armchair nanotubes obey a nonlinear scaling relation as a
function the tube radius . We show that these effects can be understood in a
theory of large radius tubes, derived from the theory of two dimensional
graphene where the coulomb interaction leads to a logarithmic correction to the
electronic self energy and marginal Fermi liquid behavior. Interactions on
length scales larger than the tube circumference lead to strong self energy and
excitonic effects that compete and nearly cancel so that the observed optical
transitions are dominated by the graphene self energy effects.Comment: 4 page
Surface States of Topological Insulators
We develop an effective bulk model with a topological boundary condition to
study the surface states of topological insulators. We find that the Dirac
point energy, the band curvature and the spin texture of surface states are
crystal face-dependent. For a given face on a sphere, the Dirac point energy is
determined by the bulk physics that breaks p-h symmetry in the surface normal
direction and is tunable by surface potentials that preserve T symmetry.
Constant energy contours near the Dirac point are ellipses with spin textures
that are helical on the S/N pole, collapsed to one dimension on any side face,
and tilted out-of-plane otherwise. Our findings identify a route to engineering
the Dirac point physics on the surfaces of real materials.Comment: 4.1 pages, 2 figures and 1 tabl
Coulomb blockade in a Si channel gated by an Al single-electron transistor
We incorporate an Al-AlO_x-Al single-electron transistor as the gate of a
narrow (~100 nm) metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET).
Near the MOSFET channel conductance threshold, we observe oscillations in the
conductance associated with Coulomb blockade in the channel, revealing the
formation of a Si single-electron transistor. Abrupt steps present in sweeps of
the Al transistor conductance versus gate voltage are correlated with
single-electron charging events in the Si transistor, and vice versa. Analysis
of these correlations using a simple electrostatic model demonstrates that the
two single-electron transistor islands are closely aligned, with an
inter-island capacitance approximately equal to 1/3 of the total capacitance of
the Si transistor island, indicating that the Si transistor is strongly coupled
to the Al transistor.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, 1 table; typos corrected, minor clarifications
added; published in AP
- …