15 research outputs found
Dielectrophoretic Growth of Platinum Nanowires: Concentration and Temperature Dependence of the Growth Velocity
Effect of Waveform of ac Voltage on the Morphology and Crystallinity of Electrochemically Assembled Platinum Nanowires
Use of a transistor array to predict infant transistor mortality rate in InGaP/GaAs heterojunction bipolar transistor technology
Quantitative Analysis of Gold Nanorod Alignment after Electric Field-Assisted Deposition
Conductance Control in VO2 Nanowires by Surface Doping with Gold Nanoparticles
The material properties of semiconductor nanowires are greatly affected by electrical, optical, and chemical processes occurring at their surfaces because of the very large surface-to-volume ratio. Precise control over doping as well as the surface charge properties has been demonstrated in thin films and nanowires for fundamental physics and application-oriented research. However, surface doping behavior is expected to differ markedly from bulk doping in conventional semiconductor materials. Here, we show that placing gold nanoparticles, in controlled manner, on the surface of an insulating vanadium dioxide nanowire introduces local charge carriers in the nanowire, and one could, in principle, completely and continuously alter the material properties of the nanowire and obtain any intermediate level of conductivity. The current in the nanowire increased by nearly 3 times when gold nanoparticles of 10(11) cm(-2) order of density were controllably placed on the nanowire surface. A strong quadratic space-charge limited (SCL) transport behavior was also observed from the conductance curve suggesting the formation of two-dimensional (2D) electron-gas-like confined layer in the nanowire with adsorbed Au NPs. In addition to stimulating scientific interest, such unusual surface doping phenomena may lead to new applications of vanadium dioxide-based electronic, optical, and chemical sensing nanodevices.close
