Size-dependent quantization of energy spectrum of conducting electrons in solids leads to oscillating dependence of electronic properties on corresponding dimension(s). In conventional metals with typical energy Fermi E F ~ 1 eV and the charge carrier's effective masses mof the order of free electron mass m 0, the quantum size phenomena provide noticeable impact only at nanometer scales. Here we experimentally demonstrate that in single-crystalline semimetal bismuth nanostructures the electronic conductivity non-monotonously decreases with reduction of the effective diameter. In samples grown along the particular crystallographic orientation the electronic conductivity abruptly increases at scales of about 50 nm due to metal-to-insulator transition mediated by the quantum confinement effect. The experimental findings are in reasonable agreement with theory predictions. The quantum-size phenomena should be taken into consideration to optimize operation of the next generation of ultra-small quantum nanoelectronic circuits.
CITATION STYLE
Sedov, E. A., Riikonen, K. P., & Arutyunov, K. Y. (2017). Quantum size phenomena in single-crystalline bismuth nanostructures. Npj Quantum Materials, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41535-017-0017-8
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