Resistance and tunneling spectra of aligned multiwalled carbon nanotube arrays

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Abstract

The resistance and tunneling spectra of samples formed by depositing silver electrodes at the two ends of aligned, template-grown, carbon nanotube arrays were measured in the temperature range 0.67-440 K. Two types of samples were fabricated, one with small oxide tunnel junctions separating the carbon nanotubes from the metal electrodes, the other with a significant Al2O3 tunnel barrier. The measurements indicate the presence of three regimes for dI/dV(V). For T>220 K, dI/dV(V) and the zero-bias conductivity show a broad minimum and an activation temperature dependence suggesting semiconductor behavior. In the temperature range 10 <2 K, a very steep rise in the zero-bias tunneling resistance is observed with a strong simultaneous suppression of the tunneling conductivity near the Fermi energy. Coulomb blockade is suggested as a plausible explanation of the observed behavior. © 2000 American Institute of Physics.

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Davydov, D. N., Li, J., Shelimov, K. B., Haslett, T. L., Moskovits, M., & Statt, B. W. (2000). Resistance and tunneling spectra of aligned multiwalled carbon nanotube arrays. Journal of Applied Physics, 88(12), 7205–7208. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1318392

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