Raman response and transport properties of tellurium atomic chains encapsulated in nanotubes

Tellurium can form nanowires of helical atomic chains. With their unique one-dimensional van der Waals structure, these nanowires are expected to show physical and electronic properties that are remarkably different from those of bulk tellurium. Here, we show that few-chain and single-chain van der...

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Published inNature electronics Vol. 3; no. 3; pp. 141 - 147
Main Authors Qin, Jing-Kai, Liao, Pai-Ying, Si, Mengwei, Gao, Shiyuan, Qiu, Gang, Jian, Jie, Wang, Qingxiao, Zhang, Si-Qi, Huang, Shouyuan, Charnas, Adam, Wang, Yixiu, Kim, Moon J, Wu, Wenzhuo, Xu, Xianfan, Wang, Hai-Yan, Yang, Li, Khin Yap, Yoke, Ye, Peide D
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group 01.03.2020
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Summary:Tellurium can form nanowires of helical atomic chains. With their unique one-dimensional van der Waals structure, these nanowires are expected to show physical and electronic properties that are remarkably different from those of bulk tellurium. Here, we show that few-chain and single-chain van der Waals tellurium nanowires can be isolated using carbon nanotube and boron nitride nanotube encapsulation. With this approach, the number of atomic chains can be controlled by the inner diameter of the nanotube. The Raman response of the structures suggests that the interaction between a single-atomic tellurium chain and a carbon nanotube is weak, and that the inter-chain interaction becomes stronger as the number of chains increases. Compared with bare tellurium nanowires on SiO2, nanowires encapsulated in boron nitride nanotubes exhibit a dramatically enhanced current-carrying capacity, with a current density of 1.5 × 108 A cm−2 that exceeds that of most semiconducting nanowires. We also use our tellurium nanowires encapsulated in boron nitride nanotubes to create field-effect transistors with a diameter of only 2 nm.By isolating one-dimensional tellurium nanowires in boron nitride nanotubes, the electronic properties of the atomic chains can be measured and the structures used to create field-effect transistors.
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ISSN:2520-1131
DOI:10.1038/s41928-020-0365-4