902 research outputs found
Electron transport in semiconducting carbon nanotubes with hetero-metallic contacts
We present an atomistic self-consistent study of the electronic and transport
properties of semiconducting carbon nanotube in contact with metal electrodes
of different work functions, which shows simultaneous electron and hole doping
inside the nanotube junction through contact-induced charge transfer. We find
that the band lineup in the nanotube bulk region is determined by the effective
work function difference between the nanotube channel and source/drain
electrodes, while electron transmission through the SWNT junction is affected
by the local band structure modulation at the two metal-nanotube interfaces,
leading to an effective decoupling of interface and bulk effects in electron
transport through nanotube junction devices.Comment: Higher quality figures available at http://www.albany.edu/~yx15212
Interference effects in electronic transport through metallic single-wall carbon nanotubes
In a recent paper Liang {\it et al.} [Nature {\bf 411}, 665 (2001)] showed
experimentally, that metallic nanotubes, strongly coupled to external
electrodes, may act as coherent molecular waveguides for electronic transport.
The experimental results were supported by theoretical analysis based on the
scattering matrix approach. In this paper we analyze theoretically this problem
using a real-space approach, which makes it possible to control quality of
interface contacts. Electronic structure of the nanotube is taken into account
within the tight-binding model. External electrodes and the central part
(sample) are assumed to be made of carbon nanotubes, while the contacts between
electrodes and the sample are modeled by appropriate on-site (diagonal) and
hopping (off-diagonal) parameters. Conductance is calculated by the Green
function technique combined with the Landauer formalism. In the plots
displaying conductance {\it vs.} bias and gate voltages, we have found typical
diamond structure patterns, similar to those observed experimentally. In
certain cases, however, we have found new features in the patterns, like a
double-diamond sub-structure.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures. To apear in Phys. Rev.
Enhanced thermal stability and spin-lattice relaxation rate of N@C60 inside carbon nanotubes
We studied the temperature stability of the endohedral fullerene molecule,
N@C60, inside single-wall carbon nanotubes using electron spin resonance
spectroscopy. We found that the nitrogen escapes at higher temperatures in the
encapsulated material as compared to its pristine, crystalline form. The
temperature dependent spin-lattice relaxation time, T_1, of the encapsulated
molecule is significantly shorter than that of the crystalline material, which
is explained by the interaction of the nitrogen spin with the conduction
electrons of the nanotubes.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
Conductance of Distorted Carbon Nanotubes
We have calculated the effects of structural distortions of armchair carbon
nanotubes on their electrical transport properties. We found that the bending
of the nanotubes decreases their transmission function in certain energy ranges
and leads to an increased electrical resistance. Electronic structure
calculations show that these energy ranges contain localized states with
significant - hybridization resulting from the increased curvature
produced by bending. Our calculations of the contact resistance show that the
large contact resistances observed for SWNTs are likely due to the weak
coupling of the NT to the metal in side bonded NT-metal configurations.Comment: 5 pages RevTeX including 4 figures, submitted to PR
Femmes au masculin : Jane Dieulafoy et Marc de Montifaud
Les photographies issues d\u27une collection unique en son genre, celle de la bibliothèque Marguerite Durand, nous convient à une traversée en pointillé de cent cinquante ans d\u27histoire des femmes, des années 1860 aux années MLF.
Portraits, photographies d\u27art ou documentaires révèlent quelques-unes des grandes aventures collectives de la vie des femmes, celles du travail, des arts et de leurs mobilisations pour leur libération.
Ce parcours en images met en lumière la double perspective de la collection depuis sa création : rendre visibles les femmes présentes dans l\u27espace public, actives dans des domaines traditionnellement réservés aux hommes et archiver les témoignages de leurs combats, encore inachevés.
Restituer ces multiples regards invite à une écriture du passé qui accorde à l\u27émancipation des femmes toute son importance, décisive dans la conquête de l\u27égalité et de liberté de tous.
Tunable adsorption on carbon nanotubes
We investigated the adsorption of a single atom, hydrogen and aluminum, on
single wall carbon nanotubes from first-principles. The adsorption is
exothermic, and the associated binding energy varies inversely as the radius of
the zigzag tube. We found that the adsorption of a single atom and related
properties can be modified continuously and reversibly by the external radial
deformation. The binding energy on the high curvature site of the deformed tube
increases with increasing radial deformation. The effects of curvature and
radial deformation depend on the chirality of the tube.Comment: To be appear in Physical Review Letter
FISSA: A neuropil decontamination toolbox for calcium imaging signals
In vivo calcium imaging has become a method of choice to image neuronal population activity throughout the nervous system. These experiments generate large sequences of images. Their analysis is computationally intensive and typically involves motion correction, image segmentation into regions of interest (ROIs), and extraction of fluorescence traces of each ROI. Out of focus fluorescence from surrounding neuropil and other cells can strongly contaminate the signal assigned to a given ROI. In this study, we introduce the FISSA toolbox (Fast Image Signal Separation Analysis) for neuropil decontamination. Given pre-defined ROIs, the FISSA toolbox automatically extracts the surrounding local neuropil and performs blind-source separation with non-negative matrix factorization. Using both simulated and in vivo data, we show that this toolbox performs similarly or better than existing published methods. FISSA requires only little RAM, allowing for fast processing of large datasets even on a standard laptop. The FISSA toolbox is available in Python, with an option for MATLAB format outputs, and can easily be integrated into existing workflows. It is available from Github and the standard Python repositories
Temperature dependence of the charge carrier mobility in gated quasi-one-dimensional systems
The many-body Monte Carlo method is used to evaluate the frequency dependent
conductivity and the average mobility of a system of hopping charges,
electronic or ionic on a one-dimensional chain or channel of finite length. Two
cases are considered: the chain is connected to electrodes and in the other
case the chain is confined giving zero dc conduction. The concentration of
charge is varied using a gate electrode. At low temperatures and with the
presence of an injection barrier, the mobility is an oscillatory function of
density. This is due to the phenomenon of charge density pinning. Mobility
changes occur due to the co-operative pinning and unpinning of the
distribution. At high temperatures, we find that the electron-electron
interaction reduces the mobility monotonically with density, but perhaps not as
much as one might intuitively expect because the path summation favour the
in-phase contributions to the mobility, i.e. the sequential paths in which the
carriers have to wait for the one in front to exit and so on. The carrier
interactions produce a frequency dependent mobility which is of the same order
as the change in the dc mobility with density, i.e. it is a comparably weak
effect. However, when combined with an injection barrier or intrinsic disorder,
the interactions reduce the free volume and amplify disorder by making it
non-local and this can explain the too early onset of frequency dependence in
the conductivity of some high mobility quasi-one-dimensional organic materials.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, to be published in Physical Review
Resonant Andreev reflections in superconductor-carbon-nanotube devices
Resonant Andreev reflection through superconductor-carbon-nanotube devices
was investigated theoretically with a focus on the superconducting proximity
effect. Consistent with a recent experiment, we find that for high transparency
devices on-resonance, the Andreev current is characterized by a large value and
a resistance dip; low-transparency off-resonance devices give the opposite
result. We also give evidence that the observed low-temperature transport
anomaly may be a natural result of Andreev reflection process
Scaling analysis of Schottky barriers at metal-embedded semiconducting carbon nanotube interfaces
We present an atomistic self-consistent tight-binding study of the electronic
and transport properties of metal-semiconducting carbon nanotube interfaces as
a function of the nanotube channel length when the end of the nanotube wire is
buried inside the electrodes. We show that the lineup of the nanotube band
structure relative to the metal Fermi-level depends strongly on the metal work
function but weakly on the details of the interface. We analyze the
length-dependent transport characteristics, which predicts a transition from
tunneling to thermally-activated transport with increasing nanotube channel
length.Comment: To appear in Phys.Rev.B Rapid Communications. Color figures available
in PRB online versio
- …