Observation of peak splitting in the Coulomb blockade regime of a carbon nanotube rope

McIntosh GC, Kim G, Park Jg, Krstic V, Roth S, Park Y (2001)


Publication Status: Published

Publication Type: Journal article, Original article

Publication year: 2001

Journal

Book Volume: 1

Pages Range: 321-325

DOI: 10.1016/S1567-1739(01)00044-X

Abstract

Electronic transport measurements have been carried out on a single-walled carbon nanotube (SWCN) rope contacted to a 4-probe Au/Pd electrode in the Coulomb blockade regime. With varying substrate backgate voltage, the observed Coulomb blockade peaks exhibit interesting three-way splitting. We find that this peak splitting can be attributed to a contribution from resonant tunnelling through discrete energy levels of a finite length metallic SWCN within the rope. We also consider the role that interactions between `quantum dot' (Q-dot) regions within the rope can play in causing the peak splitting.

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APA:

McIntosh, G.C., Kim, G., Park, J.-g., Krstic, V., Roth, S., & Park, Y. (2001). Observation of peak splitting in the Coulomb blockade regime of a carbon nanotube rope. Current Applied Physics, 1, 321-325. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1567-1739(01)00044-X

MLA:

McIntosh, Gregory C., et al. "Observation of peak splitting in the Coulomb blockade regime of a carbon nanotube rope." Current Applied Physics 1 (2001): 321-325.

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