51 research outputs found

    Density of states and magnetoconductance of disordered Au point contacts

    Full text link
    We report the first low temperature magnetotransport measurements on electrochemically fabricated atomic scale gold nanojunctions. As T→0T \to 0, the junctions exhibit nonperturbatively large zero bias anomalies (ZBAs) in their differential conductance. We consider several explanations and find that the ZBAs are consistent with a reduced local density of states (LDOS) in the disordered metal. We suggest that this is a result of Coulomb interactions in a granular metal with moderate intergrain coupling. Magnetoconductance of atomic scale junctions also differs significantly from that of less geometrically constrained devices, and supports this explanation.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures. Accepted to PRB as Brief Repor

    Localization and Capacitance Fluctuations in Disordered Au Nano-junctions

    Full text link
    Nano-junctions, containing atomic-scale gold contacts between strongly disordered leads, exhibit different transport properties at room temperature and at low temperature. At room temperature, the nano-junctions exhibit conductance quantization effects. At low temperatures, the contacts exhibit Coulomb-Blockade. We show that the differences between the room-temperature and low temperature properties arise from the localization of electronic states in the leads. The charging energy and capacitance of the nano-junctions exhibit strong fluctuations with applied magnetic field at low temperature, as predicted theoretically.Comment: 20 pages 8 figure

    Carbon Nanofiber Electrodes and Controlled Nanogaps for Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy Experiments

    Get PDF
    The electrochemical behavior of electrodes made by sealing carbon nanofibers in glass or with electrophoretic paint has been studied by scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM). Because of their small electroactive surface area, conical geometry with a low aspect ratio and high overpotential for proton and oxygen reduction, carbon nanofiber (CNF) electrodes are promising candidates for producing electrode nanogaps, imaging with high spatial resolution and for the electrodeposition of single metal nanoparticles (e.g., Pt, Pd) for studies as electrocatalysts. By using the feedback mode of the SECM, a CNF tip can produce a gap that is smaller than 20 nm from a platinum disk. Similarly, the SECM used in a tip-collection substrate-generation mode, which subsequently shows a feedback interaction at short distances, makes it possible to detect a single CNF by another CNF and then to form a nanometer gap between the two electrodes. This approach was used to image vertically aligned CNF arrays. This method is useful in the detection in a homogeneous solution of short-lifetime intermediates, which can be electrochemically generated at one electrode and collected at the second at distances that are equivalent to a nanosecond time scale. A nanogap is an electrode arrangement in which two collinear electrodes are separated by a gap of nanometer dimensions. There have been a number of studies involving nanogaps, most of these involving studies of the electronic transport properties of single molecules, which bridge the gap (e.g., DNA or other macromolecules). 1,2 Nanogaps are usually prepared with fixed dimensions, e.g., by mechanically produced break junctions, 3 break junctions formed by electromigration, 4 electrodeposition, 5 carbon nanotube extracted lithography, 6 direct e-beam lithography, 7 and conventional microscale fabrication techniques such as optical lithography, electron-beam evaporation, and liftoff. 8 In most cases, the exact gap dimensions are uncontrolled, although there have been reports of the formation of controlled nanogaps of fixed dimensions by several different approaches. 9-11 Our group has been interested in nanogaps whose dimensions are continuously variable, for example, in connection with studies of single-molecule electrochemistry 12 and in studies of rapid homogeneous reactions coupled to electron-transfer reactions at electrodes. 13 Generally, kinetic studies of electrochemically generated, unstable species can be achieved if the species lifetime is of the order of the diffusion time across the gap, d 2 /2D, where d is the gap separation and D is the diffusion coefficient. To increase the range of systems that can be studied by scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM) to chemical species with lifetimes in the microsecond and nanosecond region, one must develop experimental strategies for decreasing d to the nanometer level, i.e., to a nanogap. This can be achieved by using extremely small probes (UMEs) that can approach a substrate or another electrode to very small distances. With glass-insulated disk electrodes, of the type most frequently used in SECM, one is limited by the RG value of the electrode, i.e., the ratio of the radius of glass insulating shroud to that of the metallic disk electrode. Another problem associated with disk UMEs is that the exposed electroactive part is sometimes recessed slightly beneath the insulating layer. While this has only a minor effect during micorometer-scale measurements, any feedback-based approach to a nanometer distance often results in the insulator touching the substrate and blocking any further movement of the recessed electroactive disk. A useful approach to solving this problem is to use conical electrodes that can approach the substrate or another similar electrode to very small d values without colliding. Conical UMEs have been previously studied by a combination of scanning electron microscopy (SEM), steady-state voltammetry

    The Role of DJ-1 in Cellular Metabolism and Pathophysiological Implications for Parkinson’s Disease

    No full text
    DJ-1 is a multifunctional protein associated with pathomechanisms implicated in different chronic diseases including neurodegeneration, cancer and diabetes. Several of the physiological functions of DJ-1 are not yet fully understood; however, in the last years, there has been increasing evidence for a potential role of DJ-1 in the regulation of cellular metabolism. Here, we summarize the current knowledge on specific functions of DJ-1 relevant to cellular metabolism and their role in modulating metabolic pathways. Further, we illustrate pathophysiological implications of the metabolic effects of DJ-1 in the context of neurodegeneration in Parkinson´s disease

    Electron-Transfer Properties of Cytochrome c

    No full text
    • …
    corecore