- Quantum wire
In
condensed matter physics , a quantum wire is an electrically conductingwire , in whichquantum effects are affecting transport properties. Due to the confinement of conduction electrons in the transverse direction of the wire, their transverse energy is quantized into a series of discrete values ("ground state" energy, with lower value), ,... (seeparticle in a box ,quantum harmonic oscillator ). One consequence of this quantization is that the classical formula for calculating the electricalresistivity of a wire:is not valid for quantum wires (where is the resistivity, is the length, and is the cross-sectional area of the wire).
Instead, an exact calculation of the transverse energies of the confined electrons has to be performed to calculate a wire's resistance. Following from the quantization of electron energy, the resistance is also found to be quantized.
The importance of the quantization is inversely proportional to the diameter of the nanowire for a given material. From material to material, it is dependent on the electronic properties, especially on the
effective mass of the electrons. In simple words, it means that it will depend on how conduction electrons interact with the atoms within a given material. In practice, semiconductors show clear conductance quantization for large wire transverse dimensions (100 nm) because the electronic modes due to confinement are spatially extended. As a result their fermi wavelengths are large and thus they have low energy separations. This means that they can only be resolved at cryogenic temperature (few kelvins) where the thermal excitation energy is lower than the inter-mode energy separation.For metals, quantization corresponding to the lowest energy states is only observed for atomic wires. Their corresponding wavelength being thus extremely small they have a very large energy separation which makes resistance quantization perfectly observable at room temperature.
Carbon nanotubes as quantum wires
It is possible to make quantum wires out of metallic
carbon nanotube s, at least in limited quantities. The advantages of making wires from carbon nanotubes include their high electricalconductivity (due to a high mobility), light weight, small diameter, low chemical reactivity, and high tensile strength. The major drawback (as of2005 ) is cost. It has been claimed that it is possible to create macroscopic quantum wires. With a rope of carbon nanotubes, it is not necessary for any single fiber to travel the entire length, sincequantum tunneling will allowelectron s to jump from strand to strand. This makes quantum wires interesting for commercial uses.In April 2005,
NASA invested $11 million over four years withRice University to develop quantum wire with 10 times better conductivity thancopper at one-sixth the weight. It would be made withcarbon nanotubes and would help reduce the weight of the next generation shuttle; but can also have wide ranging applications.ee also
*
Quantum well
*Quantum dot External links
* [http://www.wired.com/news/space/0,2697,67350,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_3 Wired: - NASA Funds 'Miracle Polymer']
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.