Physics – Condensed Matter – Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
Scientific paper
2005-04-05
Applied Physics Letters 86, 043109 (24 January 2005)
Physics
Condensed Matter
Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
3 pages
Scientific paper
10.1063/1.1857095
We have developed a controlled and highly reproducible method of making nanometer-spaced electrodes using electromigration in ambient lab conditions. This advance will make feasible single molecule measurements of macromolecules with tertiary and quaternary structures that do not survive the liquid-helium temperatures at which electromigration is typically performed. A second advance is that it yields gaps of desired tunnelling resistance, as opposed to the random formation at liquid-helium temperatures. Nanogap formation occurs through three regimes: First it evolves through a bulk-neck regime where electromigration is triggered at constant temperature, then to a few-atom regime characterized by conductance quantum plateaus and jumps, and finally to a tunnelling regime across the nanogap once the conductance falls below the conductance quantum.
Bonnell Dawn A.
Johnson Alan T.
Johnston David E.
Park Tae-Ho
Smith Douglas E.
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