Tantalum oxide memristors can switch continuously from a low-conductance semiconducting to a high-conductance metallic state. At the boundary between these two regimes are quantized conductance states, which indicate the formation of a point contact within the oxide characterized by multistable conductance fluctuations and enlarged electronic noise. Here, we observe diverse conductance-dependent noise spectra, including a transition from 1/f(2) (activated transport) to 1/f (flicker noise) as a function of the frequency f, and a large peak in the noise amplitude at the conductance quantum GQ=2e(2)/h, in contrast to suppressed noise at the conductance quantum observed in other systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMultiparticle assemblies of nanoscale structures are the fundamental building blocks for powerful plasmonic devices. Here we show the controlled formation of polygonal metal nanostructure assemblies, including digon, trigon, tetragon, pentagon, and hexagon arrays, which were formed on top of predefined flexible polymer pillars that undergo self-coalescence, analogous to finger closing, with the aid of microcapillary forces. This hybrid approach of combining top-down fabrication with self-assembly enables the formation of complex nanoplasmonic structures with sub-nanometer gaps between gold nanoparticles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe properties of integrated-photonics directional couplers composed of near-field-coupled arrays of metal nanoparticles are analyzed theoretically. It is found that it is possible to generate very compact, submicron length, high field-confinement and functionality devices with very low switch energies. The analysis is carried out for a hypothetical lossless silver to demonstrate the potential of this type of circuits for applications in telecom and interconnects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHere we demonstrate a molecular trap structure that can be formed to capture analyte molecules in solution for detection and identification. The structure is based on gold-coated nanoscale polymer fingers made by nanoimprinting technique. The nanofingers are flexible and their tips can be brought together to trap molecules, while at the same time the gold-coated fingertips form a reliable Raman hot spot for molecule detection and identification based on surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe show by pump-probe spectroscopy that the optical response of a fishnet metamaterial can be modulated on the femtosecond time scale. The modulation dynamics is dominated by pump-induced changes in the constituting dielectric medium, but the strength of modulation is dramatically enhanced through the plasmon resonance. The pump-induced spectral responses of the metamaterial provide understanding on how the resonance is modified by pump excitation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe find, with the use of the first-principles calculations, that the single-atom-thick sp2-bonded noncentrosymmetric crystals like boron-nitride (BN) sheet exhibit an unusual nonlinear electromechanical effect: they become strongly macroscopically polarized in a corrugated state (or it induces significant changes in an initially polarized state of a sheet like BC2N). The direction of the induced polarization is in a plane of the film and depends nonanalytically on the corrugation wave vector k. The magnitude of the polarization can reach very large values in spite of its quadratic dependence on atomic displacements due to BN sheets being able to tolerate very large mechanical strains, similar to carbon nanotubes, and this makes this general behavior of noncentrosymmetric bodies perturbed out of equilibrium quite unique.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied the effect of the substrate on the surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) signals of metallic nanocrystal films by making a direct comparison between cases with metallic and semiconducting substrate surfaces. Ag nanoparticles smaller than 10 nm were synthesized and uniform arrays were formed on both ultrasmooth metallic and Si surfaces. These substrates provide reproducible SERS signals with high enhancement factors over large areas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
September 2008
We investigate the effects of a lattice misfit strain on a ground state and polarization patterns in flat perovskite nanoparticles (nanoislands of BaTiO3 and PZT) with the use of an ab initio derived effective Hamiltonian. We show that the strain strongly controls the balance between the depolarizing field and the polarization anizotropy in determining the equilibrium polarization patterns. Compressive strain favors 180 degrees stripe or tweed domains while a tensile strain leads to in-plane vortex formation, with the unusual intermediate phase(s) where both ordering motifs coexist.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe show that the recently discovered double-valley splitting of the Landau levels in the quantum Hall effect in graphene can be explained as the perturbative orbital interaction of intravalley and intervalley microscopic orbital currents with a magnetic field. This effect is facilitated by the translationally noninvariant terms that correspond to graphene's crystallographic honeycomb symmetry but do not exist in the relativistic theory of massless Dirac fermions in quantum electrodynamics. We discuss recent data in view of these findings.
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