656 research outputs found
Electric Switching of the Charge-Density-Wave and Normal Metallic Phases in Tantalum Disulfide Thin-Film Devices
We report on switching among three charge-density-wave phases - commensurate,
nearly commensurate, incommensurate - and the high-temperature normal metallic
phase in thin-film 1T-TaS2 devices induced by application of an in-plane
electric field. The electric switching among all phases has been achieved over
a wide temperature range, from 77 K to 400 K. The low-frequency electronic
noise spectroscopy has been used as an effective tool for monitoring the
transitions, particularly the switching from the incommensurate
charge-density-wave phase to the normal metal phase. The noise spectral density
exhibits sharp increases at the phase transition points, which correspond to
the step-like changes in resistivity. Assignment of the phases is consistent
with low-field resistivity measurements over the temperature range from 77 K to
600 K. Analysis of the experimental data and calculations of heat dissipation
suggest that Joule heating plays a dominant role in the electric-field induced
transitions in the tested 1T-TaS2 devices on Si/SiO2 substrates. The
possibility of electrical switching among four different phases of 1T-TaS2 is a
promising step toward nanoscale device applications. The results also
demonstrate the potential of noise spectroscopy for investigating and
identifying phase transitions in materials.Comment: 32 pages, 7 figure
Low-Frequency Noise Spectroscopy of Charge-Density-Wave Phase Transitions in Vertical Quasi-2D Devices
We report results regarding the electron transport in vertical quasi-2D
layered 1T-TaS2 charge-density-wave devices. The low-frequency noise
spectroscopy was used as a tool to study changes in the cross-plane electrical
characteristics of the quasi-2D material below room temperature. The noise
spectral density revealed strong peaks - changing by more than an
order-of-magnitude - at the temperatures closely matching the electrical
resistance steps. Some of the noise peaks appeared below the temperature of the
commensurate to nearly-commensurate charge-density-wave transition, possibly
indicating the presence of the debated "hidden" phase transitions. These
results confirm the potential of the noise spectroscopy for investigations of
electron transport and phase transitions in novel materials.Comment: 16 pages; 5 figure
Electrical-Field Modulation of the Charge-Density-Wave Quantum Condensate in h-BN/NbS Heterostructure Devices
We report on the field-effect modulation of the charge-density-wave quantum
condensate in the top-gated heterostructure devices implemented with
quasi-one-dimensional NbS nanowire channels and quasi-two-dimensional h-BN
gate dielectric layers. The charge-density-wave phases and collective current
in quasi-1D NbS nanowires were verified via temperature dependence of the
resistivity, non-linear current-voltage characteristics, and Shapiro steps that
appeared in the device response under radio frequency excitation mixed with the
DC bias. It was demonstrated that the electric field of the applied gate bias
can reversibly modulate the collective current of the sliding
charge-density-wave condensate. The collective current reduces with more
positive bias suggesting a surface effect on the condensate mobility. The
single particle current, at small source-drain biases, shows small amplitude
fluctuation behavior, attributed to the variations in the background potential
due to the pinned or creeping charge-density-wave condensate. The knowledge of
the electric-field effect on the charge density waves in quasi-1D NbS
nanowires is useful for potential electronic applications of such quantum
materials.Comment: 17 pages; 5 figure
Decomposition of Ruthenium Olefin Metathesis Catalysts
The decomposition of a series of ruthenium metathesis catalysts has been examined using methylidene species as model complexes. All of the phosphine-containing methylidene complexes decomposed to generate methylphosphonium salts, and their decomposition routes followed first-order kinetics. The formation of these salts in high conversion, coupled with the observed kinetic behavior for this reaction, suggests that the major decomposition pathway involves nucleophilic attack of a dissociated phosphine on the methylidene carbon. This mechanism also is consistent with decomposition observed in the presence of ethylene as a model olefin substrate. The decomposition of phosphine-free catalyst (H_2IMes)(Cl)_2Ru CH(2-C_6H_4-O-i-Pr) (H_2IMes = 1,3-dimesityl-4,5-dihydroimidazol-2-ylidene) with ethylene was found to generate unidentified ruthenium hydride species. The novel ruthenium complex (H_2IMes)(pyridine)_3(Cl)_2Ru, which was generated during the synthetic attempts to prepare the highly unstable pyridine-based methylidene complex (H_2IMes)(pyridine)_2(Cl)_2Ru CH_2, is also reported
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