7 research outputs found
Electrostatic Control of the Thermoelectric Figure of Merit in Ion-Gated Nanotransistors
Semiconductor nanostructures have raised much hope for the implementation of high-performance thermoelectric generators. Indeed, they are expected to make available reduced thermal conductivity without a heavy trade-off on electrical conductivity, a key requirement to optimize the thermoelectric figure of merit. Here, a novel nanodevice architecture is presented in which ionic liquids are employed as thermally-insulating gate dielectrics. These devices allow the field-effect control of electrical transport in suspended semiconducting nanowires in which thermal conductivity can be simultaneously measured using an all-electrical setup. The resulting experimental data on electrical and thermal transport properties taken on individual nanodevices can be combined to extract ZT, guide device optimization and dynamical tuning of the thermoelectric properties
Redox Active Cage for the Electrochemical Sensing of Anions
The tripodal system [1]3+ forms a 1:1 complex with CoII in which the metal is octahedrally coordinated by three bpy
fragments. The [CoII(1)]5+ complex provides a cavity suitable for solvent or anion inclusion. X-ray diffraction studies
on the crystalline complex salt of formula [CoII(1) · · ·H2O]Cl(PF6)4 · 2MeCN have shown that a water molecule is
included in the cavity and the water oxygen atom receives six H-bonds from the C-H fragments of the three
imidazolium subunits and of the three proximate pyridine rings, according to a slightly distorted trigonal prismatic
geometry. Anion inclusion in an aqueous MeCN solution induces a distinct cathodic shift of the potential of the
CoIII/CoII couple, whose magnitude decreases along the series: Cl- > Br- ∼ NCO- > I- ∼ NCS-, which reflects
anion tendencies to receive H-bonds from the receptor. The variation of the water content in the MeCN solution
(from 0 to 20%) induces a gradual change of the voltammetric response to anion titration: from two well distinguished
peaks at a fixed potential to a single peak progressively shifted to a more cathodic potential. Such a behavior
parallels the gradual decrease of the equilibrium constant for anion inclusion into the [CoII(1)]5+ recepto
Impact of electrostatic doping on carrier concentration and mobility in InAs nanowires
We fabricate dual-gated electric double layer (EDL) field effect transistors based on InAs nanowires gated with an ionic liquid, and we perform electrical transport measurements in the temperature range from room temperature to 4.2 K. By adjusting the spatial distribution of ions inside the ionic liquid employed as gate dielectric, we electrostatically induce doping in the nanostructures under analysis. We extract low-temperature carrier concentration and mobility in very different doping regimes from the analysis of current-voltage characteristics and transconductances measured exploiting global back-gating. In the liquid gate voltage interval from -2 to 2 V, carrier concentration can be enhanced up to two orders of magnitude. Meanwhile, the effect of the ionic accumulation on the nanowire surface turns out to be detrimental to the electron mobility of the semiconductor nanostructure: The electron mobility is quenched irrespectively to the sign of the accumulated ionic species. The reported results shine light on the effective impact on crucial transport parameters of EDL gating in semiconductor nanodevices and they should be considered when designing experiments in which electrostatic doping of semiconductor nanostructures via electrolyte gating is involved
Publisher Correction: Fe-functionalized paramagnetic sporopollenin from pollen grains: one-pot synthesis using ionic liquids (Scientific Reports, (2020), 10, 1, (12005), 10.1038/s41598-020-68875-6)
In the original version of this Article, F. Rossella was incorrectly listed as a corresponding author. The correct corresponding author for this Article is C.S. Pomelli. Correspondence and request for materials should be addressed to [email protected]. This error has now been corrected in the HTML and PDF versions of the Article