Sang-Min Park, Mark P. Stoykovich, et al.
Advanced Materials
The electronic structure of finite-length armchair carbon nanotubes has been studied using several ab-initio and semiempirical quantum computational techniques. The additional confinement of the electrons along the tube axis leads to the opening of a band-gap in short armchair tubes. The value of the band-gap decreases with increasing tube length; however, the decrease is not monotonic but shows a well-defined oscillation in short tubes. This oscillation can be explained in terms of periodic changes in the bonding characteristics of the HOMO and LUMO orbitals of the tubes. Finite-size graphene sheets are also found to have a finite band-gap, but no clear oscillation is observed. As the length of the tube increases the density of states (DOS) spectrum evolves from that characteristic of a zero-dimensional (0-D) system to that characteristic of a delocalized one-dimensional (1-D) system. This transformation appears to be complete already for tubes 10 nm long. The chemical stability of the nanotubes, expressed by the binding energy of a carbon atom, increases in a similar manner. © 1999 American Chemical Society.
Sang-Min Park, Mark P. Stoykovich, et al.
Advanced Materials
E. Babich, J. Paraszczak, et al.
Microelectronic Engineering
Elizabeth A. Sholler, Frederick M. Meyer, et al.
SPIE AeroSense 1997
U. Wieser, U. Kunze, et al.
Physica E: Low-Dimensional Systems and Nanostructures