Multiwalled Carbon Nanotubes as Building Blocks in Nanoelectronics
Markus Ahlskog, Pertti Hakonen, Mikko Paalanen, Leif Roschier, and, Reeta Tarkiainen

TL;DR
This paper explores the use of multiwalled carbon nanotubes in nanoelectronics, demonstrating their application in components like single electron transistors, resistors, and transmission lines, with promising low-noise and high-frequency properties.
Contribution
It experimentally shows how MWNTs can be used to construct various nanoelectronic components with specific electrical characteristics, highlighting their potential in future nanoelectronic devices.
Findings
Low-noise SET electrometers with 6x10^{-6}e/√Hz at 45 Hz
Effective use of MWNTs as high-impedance LC transmission lines
Successful fabrication of nearly Ohmic resistors using reactive ion etching
Abstract
Molecular level components, like carbon multiwalled nanotubes (MWNT), show great potential for future nanoelectronics. At low frequencies, only the outermost carbon layer determines the transport properties of the MWNT. Due to the multiwalled structure and large capacitive interlayer coupling, also the inner layers contribute to the conduction at high frequencies. Consequently, the conduction properties of MWNTs are not very far from those of regular conductors with well-defined electrical characteristics. In our work we have experimentally utilized this fact in constructing various nanoelectronic components out of MWNTs, such as single electron transistors (SET), lumped resistors, and transmission lines. We present results on several nano- tube samples, grown both using chemical vapor deposition as well as arc-discharge vaporization. Our results show that SET-electrometers with a noise…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCarbon Nanotubes in Composites · Nanotechnology research and applications · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
