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Dive into the research topics where Marcel Rother is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcel Rother.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

Understanding Charge Transport in Mixed Networks of Semiconducting Carbon Nanotubes.

Marcel Rother; Stefan P. Schießl; Yuriy Zakharko; Florentina Gannott; Jana Zaumseil

The ability to select and enrich semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNT) with high purity has led to a fast rise of solution-processed nanotube network field-effect transistors (FETs) with high carrier mobilities and on/off current ratios. However, it remains an open question whether it is best to use a network of only one nanotube species (monochiral) or whether a mix of purely semiconducting nanotubes but with different bandgaps is sufficient for high performance FETs. For a range of different polymer-sorted semiconducting SWNT networks, we demonstrate that a very small amount of narrow bandgap nanotubes within a dense network of large bandgap nanotubes can dominate the transport and thus severely limit on-currents and effective carrier mobility. Using gate-voltage-dependent electroluminescence, we spatially and spectrally reveal preferential charge transport that does not depend on nominal network density but on the energy level distribution within the network and carrier density. On the basis of these results, we outline rational guidelines for the use of mixed SWNT networks to obtain high performance FETs while reducing the cost for purification.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018

From Broadband to Electrochromic Notch Filters with Printed Monochiral Carbon Nanotubes

Felix J. Berger; Thomas M. Higgins; Marcel Rother; Arko Graf; Yuriy Zakharko; Sybille Allard; Maik Matthiesen; Jan M. Gotthardt; Ullrich Scherf; Jana Zaumseil

Dense layers of semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) serve as electrochromic (EC) materials in the near-infrared with high optical density and high conductivity. EC cells with tunable notch filter properties instead of broadband absorption are created via highly selective dispersion of specific semiconducting SWNTs through polymer-wrapping followed by deposition of thick films by aerosol-jet printing. A simple planar geometry with spray-coated mixed SWNTs as the counter electrode renders transparent metal oxides redundant and facilitates complete bleaching within a few seconds through iongel electrolytes with high ionic conductivities. Monochiral (6,5) SWNT films as working electrodes exhibit a narrow absorption band at 997 nm (full width at half-maximum of 55–73 nm) with voltage-dependent optical densities between 0.2 and 4.5 and a modulation depth of up to 43 dB. These (6,5) SWNT notch filters can retain more than 95% of maximum bleaching for several hours under open-circuit conditions. In addition, different levels of transmission can be set by applying constant low voltage (1.5 V) pulses with modulated width or by a given number of fixed short pulses.


ACS Nano | 2018

Efficient n-Doping and Hole Blocking in Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube Transistors with 1,2,4,5-Tetrakis(tetramethylguanidino)ben-zene

Severin Schneider; Maximilian Brohmann; Roxana Lorenz; Yvonne J. Hofstetter; Marcel Rother; Eric Sauter; Michael Zharnikov; Yana Vaynzof; Hans-Joerg Himmel; Jana Zaumseil

Efficient, stable, and solution-based n-doping of semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) is highly desired for complementary circuits but remains a significant challenge. Here, we present 1,2,4,5-tetrakis(tetramethylguanidino)benzene (ttmgb) as a strong two-electron donor that enables the fabrication of purely n-type SWCNT field-effect transistors (FETs). We apply ttmgb to networks of monochiral, semiconducting (6,5) SWCNTs that show intrinsic ambipolar behavior in bottom-contact/top-gate FETs and obtain unipolar n-type transport with 3-5-fold enhancement of electron mobilities (approximately 10 cm2 V-1 s-1), while completely suppressing hole currents, even at high drain voltages. These n-type FETs show excellent on/off current ratios of up to 108, steep subthreshold swings (80-100 mV/dec), and almost no hysteresis. Their excellent device characteristics stem from the reduction of the work function of the gold electrodes via contact doping, blocking of hole injection by ttmgb2+ on the electrode surface, and removal of residual water from the SWCNT network by ttmgb protonation. The ttmgb-treated SWCNT FETs also display excellent environmental stability under bias stress in ambient conditions. Complementary inverters based on n- and p-doped SWCNT FETs exhibit rail-to-rail operation with high gain and low power dissipation. The simple and stable ttmgb molecule thus serves as an example for the larger class of guanidino-functionalized aromatic compounds as promising electron donors for high-performance thin film electronics.


Nano Letters | 2018

Radiative Pumping and Propagation of Plexcitons in Diffractive Plasmonic Crystals

Yuriy Zakharko; Marcel Rother; Arko Graf; Bernd Hähnlein; Maximilian Brohmann; Jörg Pezoldt; Jana Zaumseil

Strong coupling between plasmons and excitons leads to the formation of plexcitons: quasiparticles that combine nanoscale energy confinement and pronounced optical nonlinearities. In addition to these localized modes, the enhanced control over the dispersion relation of propagating plexcitons may enable coherent and collective coupling of distant emitters. Here, we experimentally demonstrate strong coupling between carbon nanotube excitons and spatially extended plasmonic modes formed via diffractive coupling of periodically arranged gold nanoparticles (nanodisks, nanorods). Depending on the light-matter composition, the rather long-lived plexcitons (>100 fs) undergo highly directional propagation over 20 μm. Near-field energy distributions calculated with the finite-difference time-domain method fully corroborate our experimental results. The previously demonstrated compatibility of this plexcitonic system with electrical excitation opens the path to the realization of a variety of ultrafast active plasmonic devices, cavity-assisted energy transport and low-power optoelectronic components.


Applied Physics Letters | 2017

Extracting the field-effect mobilities of random semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotube networks: A critical comparison of methods

Stefan P. Schießl; Marcel Rother; Jan Lüttgens; Jana Zaumseil

The field-effect mobility is an important figure of merit for semiconductors such as random networks of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs). However, owing to their network properties and quantum capacitance, the standard models for field-effect transistors cannot be applied without modifications. Several different methods are used to determine the mobility with often very different results. We fabricated and characterized field-effect transistors with different polymer-sorted, semiconducting SWNT network densities ranging from low (≈6 μm−1) to densely packed quasi-monolayers (≈26 μm−1) with a maximum on-conductance of 0.24 μS μm−1 and compared four different techniques to evaluate the field-effect mobility. We demonstrate the limits and requirements for each method with regard to device layout and carrier accumulation. We find that techniques that take into account the measured capacitance on the active device give the most reliable mobility values. Finally, we compare our experimental results to a ra...


Advanced electronic materials | 2017

Aerosol‐Jet Printing of Polymer‐Sorted (6,5) Carbon Nanotubes for Field‐Effect Transistors with High Reproducibility

Marcel Rother; Maximilian Brohmann; Shuyi Yang; Stefan Grimm; Stefan P. Schießl; Arko Graf; Jana Zaumseil


Organic Electronics | 2017

Direct visualization of percolation paths in carbon nanotube/polymer composites

Andreas Malhofer; Marcel Rother; Yuriy Zakharko; Arko Graf; Stefan P. Schießl; Jana Zaumseil


Carbon | 2017

Doping-dependent G-mode shifts of small diameter semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes

Stefan Grimm; Stefan P. Schießl; Yuriy Zakharko; Marcel Rother; Maximilian Brohmann; Jana Zaumseil


Physical Review Materials | 2017

Modeling carrier density dependent charge transport in semiconducting carbon nanotube networks

S.P. Schiessl; X. de Vries; Marcel Rother; A. Masse; Maximilian Brohmann; Pa Peter Bobbert; Jana Zaumseil


Sensors and Actuators B-chemical | 2018

Highly sensitive, selective and label-free protein detection in physiological solutions using carbon nanotube transistors with nanobody receptors

Marcin S. Filipiak; Marcel Rother; Nesha M. Andoy; Arne C. Knudsen; Stefan Grimm; Christopher Bachran; Lee Kim Swee; Jana Zaumseil; Alexey Tarasov

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Arko Graf

Heidelberg University

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Stefan Grimm

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Florentina Gannott

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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