Mechanical and electrical properties of CdTe tetrapods studied by atomic force microscopy
Article 2007 en
Authors
LF
Liang Fang
JP
Jeong Young Park
YC
Yi Cui
Abstract
1 min read
The mechanical and electrical properties of CdTe tetrapod-shaped nanocrystals have been studied with atomic force microscopy. Tapping mode images of tetrapods deposited on silicon wafers revealed that they contact the surface with three of its arms. The length of these arms was found to be 130±10nm. A large fraction of the tetrapods had a shortened vertical arm as a result of fracture during sample preparation. Fracture also occurs when the applied load is a few nanonewtons. Compression experiments with the atomic force microscope tip indicate that tetrapods with the shortened vertical arm deform elastically when the applied force was less than 50nN. Above 90nN additional fracture events occurred that further shortened the vertical arm. Loads above 130nN produced irreversible damage to the other arms as well. Current-voltage characteristics of tetrapods deposited on gold revealed a semiconducting behavior with a current gap of ∼2eV at low loads (<50nN) and a narrowing to about 1eV at loads between 60 and 110nN. Atomistic force field calculations of the deformation suggest that the ends of the tetrapod arms are stuck during compression so that the deformations are due to bending modes. Empirical pseudopotential calculation of the electron states indicates that the reduction of the current gap is due to electrostatic effects, rather than strain deformation effects inside the tetrapod.
Bas L. M. Hendriksen, Florent Martin, Yabing Qi, Clayton Mauldin, Nenad Vukmirović, Junfeng Ren, Herbert Wormeester, Allard J. Katan, Virginia Altoé, Shaul Aloni, Jean Mj Frechet, Lin‐Wang Wang, Miquel Salmerón
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