One-dimensional materials have gained much attention in the last decades: from carbon nanotubes to ultrathin nanowires to few-atom atomic chains, these can all display unique electronic properties and great potential for next-generation applications. Exfoliable bulk materials could naturally provide a source for one-dimensional wires with a well-defined structure and electronics. Here, we explore a database of one-dimensional materials that could be exfoliated from experimentally known three-dimensional van der Waals compounds, searching for metallic wires that are resilient to Peierls distortions and could act as vias or interconnects for future downscaled electronic devices. As the one-dimensional nature makes these wires particularly susceptible to dynamical instabilities, we carefully characterize vibrational properties to identify stable phases and characterize electronic and dynamical properties. Our search discovers several stable wires; notably, we identify what could be the thinnest possible exfoliable metallic wire, CuC2, coming a step closer to the ultimate limit in material downscaling.

Cignarella, C., Campi, D., Marzari, N. (2024). Searching for the Thinnest Metallic Wire. ACS NANO, 18(25), 16101-16112 [10.1021/acsnano.3c12802].

Searching for the Thinnest Metallic Wire

Campi D.;
2024

Abstract

One-dimensional materials have gained much attention in the last decades: from carbon nanotubes to ultrathin nanowires to few-atom atomic chains, these can all display unique electronic properties and great potential for next-generation applications. Exfoliable bulk materials could naturally provide a source for one-dimensional wires with a well-defined structure and electronics. Here, we explore a database of one-dimensional materials that could be exfoliated from experimentally known three-dimensional van der Waals compounds, searching for metallic wires that are resilient to Peierls distortions and could act as vias or interconnects for future downscaled electronic devices. As the one-dimensional nature makes these wires particularly susceptible to dynamical instabilities, we carefully characterize vibrational properties to identify stable phases and characterize electronic and dynamical properties. Our search discovers several stable wires; notably, we identify what could be the thinnest possible exfoliable metallic wire, CuC2, coming a step closer to the ultimate limit in material downscaling.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
atomic metallic wires; materials discovery; one-dimensional materials; Peierls transition; quasi-1D van der Waals;
English
2024
18
25
16101
16112
open
Cignarella, C., Campi, D., Marzari, N. (2024). Searching for the Thinnest Metallic Wire. ACS NANO, 18(25), 16101-16112 [10.1021/acsnano.3c12802].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/519919
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