Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Fuhua Yang is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Fuhua Yang.


Applied Physics Letters | 2003

Green-light-emitting ZnSe nanowires fabricated via vapor phase growth

Bin Xiang; Hongzhou Zhang; Guihua Li; Fuhua Yang; Su Fh; Rongming Wang; J. Xu; Guang-Hong Lu; Xiaoxiao Sun; Qing-Tai Zhao; Dapeng Yu

Stoichiometric ZnSe nanowires have been synthesized through a vapor phase reaction of zinc and selenium powder on the (100) silicon substrate coated with a gold film of 2 nm in thickness. The microstructures and the chemical compositions of the as-grown nanowires have been investigated by means of electron microscopy, the energy dispersive spectroscopy, and Raman spectroscopy. The results reveal that the as-grown materials consist of ZnSe nanowires with diameters ranging from 5 to 50 nm. Photoluminescence of the sample demonstrates a strong green emission from room temperature down to 10 K. This is attributed to the recombination of electrons from conduction band to the medium deep Au acceptors.


Advanced Materials | 2013

Boron nitride nanopores: Highly sensitive DNA single-molecule detectors

Song Liu; Bo Lu; Qing Zhao; Ji Li; Teng Gao; Yubin Chen; Yanfeng Zhang; Zhongfan Liu; Zhongchao Fan; Fuhua Yang; Liping You; Dapeng Yu

The first electronic measurement of DNA translocation through ultrathin BN nanopores is demonstrated. BN nanopores show much higher detection sensitivity compared with SiN nanopores. BN has a spatial resolution as graphene. The ultrathin BN nanopores provide substantial opportunities in realizing high-spatial-sensitivity nanopore electrical devices for various applications.


Nanotechnology | 2012

Fast and controllable fabrication of suspended graphene nanopore devices

Song Liu; Qing Zhao; Jun Xu; Kai Yan; Hailin Peng; Fuhua Yang; Liping You; Dapeng Yu

A poly(methyl methacrylate) assisted dry transfer method was developed to transfer graphene microflake onto a suspended SiN chip in an effective and efficient way for further graphene nanopore drilling for DNA analysis. Graphene microflakes can be patterned by e-beam lithography to a designed shape and size on a large scale of a few thousands simultaneously. Subsequently, individual graphene microflakes can be picked up and transferred to a target hole on a suspended SiN membrane with 1xa0µm precision via a site-specific transfer-printing method. Nanopores with different diameters from 3 to 20xa0nm were drilled on the as-transferred graphene membrane in a transmission electron microscope. This method offers a fast and controllable way to fabricate graphene nanopores for DNA analyses.


Semiconductor Science and Technology | 2003

A novel method of determining semiconductor parameters in EBIC and SEBIV modes of SEM

Shi-Qiu Zhu; E I Rau; Fuhua Yang

We present a novel method for determining semiconductor parameters such as diffusion length L, lifetime tau and surface recombination velocity S of minority carriers by employing scanning electron microscopy (SEM). This new method is applicable to both electron beam induced current (EBIC and surface electron beam induced voltage (SEBIV) modes in SEM. The quantitative descriptions for EBIC and SEBIV signals are derived. The parameters L, S and tau can be directly extracted from the expressions for EBIC or SEBIV signals and their relaxation characteristics in experiment. As an example, the values of L, S and tau for n-p junction and p-Si crystal are determined by using the novel method in EBIC or SEBIV mode. The carrier diffusion length of a p-Si crystal is determined to be 8.74 mum in SEBIV mode. It is very close to the normal diffusion length of 7.41 mum of this sample. The novel method is proved to be very helpful for the quantitative characterization of semiconductor materials and devices. Especially, the SEBIV mode in SEM shows great potential for investigating semiconductor structures nondestructively.


Small | 2013

Slowing Down DNA Translocation Through Solid-State Nanopores by Pressure

Hengbin Zhang; Qing Zhao; Zhipeng Tang; Song Liu; Qingtao Li; Zhongchao Fan; Fuhua Yang; Liping You; Xuemei Li; Jingmin Zhang; Dapeng Yu

The effect of applied pressure on event duration distributions in 3 kb dsDNA translocation is systematically investigated. The effects of pressure magnitude and nanopore size on the length discrimination between 615 bp and 1.14 kbp dsDNA is studied. The pressure-controlled DNA translocation in solid-state nanopores makes a significant contribution to improve the temporal resolution in DNA single-molecule detection.


Nanotechnology | 2010

Selective and lithography-independent fabrication of 20 nm nano-gap electrodes and nano-channels for nanoelectrofluidics applications

Jinfeng Zhang; Xuandong Wang; Xiaodong Wang; Zhongchao Fan; Y. L. Li; An Ji; Fuhua Yang

A new method has been developed to selectively fabricate nano-gap electrodes and nano-channels by conventional lithography. Based on a sacrificial spacer process, we have successfully obtained sub-100-nm nano-gap electrodes and nano-channels and further reduced the dimensions to 20 nm by shrinking the sacrificial spacer size. Our method shows good selectivity between nano-gap electrodes and nano-channels due to different sacrificial spacer etch conditions. There is no length limit for the nano-gap electrode and the nano-channel. The method reported in this paper also allows for wafer scale fabrication, high throughput, low cost, and good compatibility with modern semiconductor technology.


Nanotechnology | 2007

Compact universal logic gates realized using quantization of current in nanodevices

Wancheng Zhang; Nan-Jian Wu; Fuhua Yang

This paper proposes novel universal logic gates using the current quantization characteristics of nanodevices. In nanodevices like the electron waveguide (EW) and single-electron (SE) turnstile, the channel current is a staircase quantized function of its control voltage. We use this unique characteristic to compactly realize Boolean functions. First we present the concept of the periodic-threshold threshold logic gate (PTTG), and we build a compact PTTG using EW and SE turnstiles. We show that an arbitrary three-input Boolean function can be realized with a single PTTG, and an arbitrary four-input Boolean function can be realized by using two PTTGs. We then use one PTTG to build a universal programmable two-input logic gate which can be used to realize all two-input Boolean functions. We also build a programmable three-input logic gate by using one PTTG. Compared with linear threshold logic gates, with the PTTG one can build digital circuits more compactly. The proposed PTTGs are promising for future smart nanoscale digital system use.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2004

Photo-capacitance response of internal tunnelling coupling in quantum-dot-imbedded heterostructures under selective photo-excitation

Gong Li; Xiaoying Zhou; Fuhua Yang; Ping-Heng Tan; Houzhi Zheng; Yuxin Zeng

Under selective photo-excitation, the capacitance response of internal tunnelling coupling in quantum-dots-imbedded heterostructures is studied to clarify the electronic states and the number densities of electrons filling in the quantum dots (QDs). The random nature for both optical transitions and the filling in a QD assembly makes highly resolved capacitance peaks appear in the C-V characteristic after turning off the photo-excitation.


Applied Physics Letters | 1998

Suppression of sequential tunneling current by a perpendicular magnetic field in a three-barrier, two-well heterostructure

Yang Ji; Yuanzhen Chen; Kejian Luo; Houzhi Zheng; Yuexia Li; Chengfang Li; W.-D. Cheng; Fuhua Yang

When an intersubband relaxation is involved in vertical transport in a tunneling heterostructure, the magnetic suppression of the intersubband LO or LA phonon scattering may also give rise to a noticeable depression of the resonant tunneling current, unrelated to the Coulomb correlation effect. The slowdown of the intersubband scattering rate makes fewer electrons able to tunnel resonantly between two adjacent quantum wells (QWs) in a three-barrier, two-well heterostructure. The influence of the magnetic field on the intersubband relaxation can be studied in an explicit way by a physical model based on the dynamics of carrier populations in the ground and excited subbands of the incident QW.


Semiconductor Science and Technology | 2001

Capacitance-voltage characteristic as a trace of the exciton evolvement from spatially direct to indirect in quantum wells

Yan Tang; Houzhi Zheng; Fuhua Yang; Ping-Heng Tan; Yuexia Li

We have investigated the photo-excited capacitance-voltage (C-V) characteristics as well as the photoluminescence spectra under different biases of a wide quantum well (QW) embedded in an n(+)-i-n(+) double-barrier structure. The pronounced peak feature at zero bias in the C-V spectrum observed upon illumination is regarded as a kind of quantum capacitance related to the quantum confined Stark effect, originating from the spatial separation of the photo-generated electron and hole gas in the QW. This fact is further demonstrated through the comparison between the C-V curve with the PL intensity versus applied voltage relationship under the same excitation. The results may provide us with a more direct and sensitive means in the detection of the separation and accumulation of both types of free carriers-electrons and holes-in low-dimensional semiconductor structures, especially in a new type of optical memory cell.

Collaboration


Dive into the Fuhua Yang's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dapeng Yu

South University of Science and Technology of China

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Houzhi Zheng

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ping-Heng Tan

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Zhongchao Fan

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge