
Giving electrons a ride: nanomechanical electron shuttles
In 1998, L.Y. Gorelik et al.,
proposed a novel mechanism of charge transport in nanostructures based on mechanical
shuttling of electrons
Fig. 1
. The basic element (see Fig. a,b), which is called a shuttle-junction,
consists of a metallic nanoparticle connected by flexible,
“elastic” molecules to two nanoelectrodes. For low applied voltages
where the nanoparticle is stationary the device is similar to a single-electron
transistor. The vibrational process can be initiated by applying a sufficiently
large bias voltage to the electrodes and nanoparticle start to shuttle
electrons between electrodes (see self-explanatory animations: http://www.lboro.ac.uk/departments/ph/research/animations/Shuttle1.swf).
Exploitation of this mechanism could potentially lead to the development of a
new generation of nanomechanical electronic devices, such as transistors,
current standards, very sensitive electrometers, sensors, logic gates, and
memories with ultra low power consumption and high speed of operation.
Due to recent fruitful collaboration [1] between Loughborough and Bath Universities, the first metallic electromechanical nanoshuttles consisting of a 20 nm diameter gold nanoparticle embedded within the gap between two gold electrodes (Fig. c) was fabricated. Current-voltage characteristics for these devices have been measured and compared with the results of our computer simulations.
1. A.V. Moskalenko, S.N. Gordeev, O.F. Koentjoro, P.R. Raithby, Robert.W. French, F. Marken, and S.E. Savel'ev, Phys. Rev. B 79, 241403(R) (2009); http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRB/v79/e241403
Theoretical model of an
idealised shuttle-junction (a), illustration of the shuttling process (b)
and (c) experimental realisation of a shuttle-junction. The device consists
of a 20 nm gold nanoparticle attached to two gold electrodes through
monolayers of octanedithiol molecules serving as
springs.
