James
E. Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
(217) 244-1073; kloeppel@illinois.edu
1/3/02
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
First came fullerenes, those cage-like molecules of 60 carbon
atoms bound in a ball. Then came long, thin soda straws of carbon atoms
called nanotubes. Now there are fullerenes nested within nanotubes,
like so many peas in a pod.
Scientists recently discovered that these nanoscopic peapods
the latest class of nanomaterials created by filling the cores of single-wall
nanotubes have tunable electronic properties. For shrinking circuits,
nanotubes are the silicon of nanoelectronics, and the new findings could
have far-reaching implications for the fabrication of single-molecule-based
devices, such as diodes, transistors and memory elements.
"Our measurements show that encapsulation of molecules can dramatically
modify the electronic properties of single-wall nanotubes," said
Ali Yazdani, a professor of physics at the University of Illinois and
senior author of a paper to appear in the journal Science, as part of
the Science Express Web site, on Jan. 3. "We also show that an
ordered array of encapsulated molecules can be used to engineer electron
motion inside nanotubes in a predictable way."
The new findings point to the future design of other hybrid nanoscale
structures that could be tailored for a particular electronic function.
Much like the dopant added to silicon, which turns beach sand into todays
computer chips, the encapsulated molecules could make nanotubes more
attractive as the material of choice for future nanocircuits.
To explore the properties of these novel nanostructures, Yazdani and
UI graduate student Daniel Hornbaker used a low-temperature scanning
tunneling microscope that they built at the UI. With their high resolution
STM, the researchers were able to image the physical structure of individual
peapods and to map the motion of electrons inside them.
The peapod samples were produced using molecular self-assembly techniques
by University of Pennsylvania materials science professor David Luzzi
and his group at Pennsylvania, who were the first to synthesize these
complex nanostructures.
By examining STM images of individual peapods, the UI researchers found
that the encapsulated fullerenes modify the electronic properties of
the nanotube without affecting its atomic structure.
"In contrast to unfilled nanotubes, peapods exhibit additional
electronic features that are strongly dependent on the location along
the tube," Yazdani said. "By mapping electron waves of different
energies inside these nanoscale structures, we can begin to unravel
the complex interaction in these systems, and better understand their
electronic properties."
To further demonstrate the importance of the C-60 molecules in determining
the electronic properties of the peapods, the researchers used the STM
to manipulate the encapsulated molecules. With this unique experimental
technique, they were able to compare the measurements performed on the
same section of nanotube with and without the encapsulated molecules.
How the measured electronic properties of the peapod differed in the
two cases provides insight into what could become design rules for hybrid
structures having a specific type of electronic functionality. Because
the local electronic properties of single-wall nanotubes can be selectively
modified by the encapsulation of a single molecule, for example, the
technique might one day be used to define on-tube electronic devices.
The UI group collaborated with University of Pennsylvania physics professor
Gene Mele, who modeled the experimental findings.
"The encapsulated balls have a much stronger effect on the electronic
structure of the tube than we had expected," Mele said. "Fortunately,
we were saved by the high geometrical symmetry of these structures.
That allowed us to develop a good model and in the end the physics turned
out to be very intuitive and pretty."
The researchers speculate that the lessons learned in unraveling the
properties of this complex nanostructure also may apply elsewhere.
"As the drive toward miniaturization of electronic devices continues,
concepts such as symmetry of electronic states may be useful in controlling
the electronic properties of individual nanostructures and for coupling
them together," Yazdani said.