Publication | Closed Access
Defects, Quasibound States, and Quantum Conductance in Metallic Carbon Nanotubes
528
Citations
24
References
2000
Year
NanosheetEngineeringCarbon-based MaterialHexagonal Boron NitrideNanoelectronicsMetallic Carbon NanotubesImpurity StatesCharge Carrier TransportCarbon NanotubesMaterials ScienceElectrical EngineeringPhysicsNanotechnologyIntrinsic ImpurityQuantum ChemistryElectrical PropertyQuasibound StatesOne-dimensional MaterialConductance ReductionNanomaterialsNatural SciencesCondensed Matter PhysicsApplied Physics
The effects of impurities and local structural defects on the conductance of metallic carbon nanotubes are calculated using an ab initio pseudopotential method within the Landauer formalism. Substitutionally doped boron or nitrogen produces quasibound impurity states of a definite parity and reduces the conductance by a quantum unit (2e(2)/h) via resonant backscattering. These resonant states show strong similarity to acceptor or donor states in semiconductors. The Stone-Wales defect also produces quasibound states and exhibits quantized conductance reduction. In the case of a vacancy, the conductance shows a much more complex behavior than the prediction from the widely used pi-electron tight-binding model.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1