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Dive into the research topics where Nitzan Shadmi is active.

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Featured researches published by Nitzan Shadmi.


Nano Letters | 2010

Modulating the electronic properties along carbon nanotubes via tube-substrate interaction.

Jaqueline S. Soares; Ana Paula M. Barboza; Paulo T. Araujo; Newton M. Barbosa Neto; Denise Nakabayashi; Nitzan Shadmi; Tohar S. Yarden; Ariel Ismach; Noam Geblinger; Ernesto Joselevich; Cecília Vilani; Luiz Gustavo Cançado; Lukas Novotny; G. Dresselhaus; Mildred S. Dresselhaus; Bernardo R. A. Neves; Mario S. C. Mazzoni; A. Jorio

We study single wall carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) deposited on quartz. Their Raman spectrum depends on the tube-substrate morphology, and in some cases, it shows that the same SWNT-on-quartz system exhibits a mixture of semiconductor and metal behavior, depending on the orientation between the tube and the substrate. We also address the problem using electric force microscopy and ab initio calculations, both showing that the electronic properties along a single SWNT are being modulated via tube-substrate interaction.


Nature | 2016

Nanoscale thermal imaging of dissipation in quantum systems

Dorri Halbertal; Jo Cuppens; M. Ben Shalom; Lior Embon; Nitzan Shadmi; Yonathan Anahory; H. R. Naren; Jayanta Sarkar; Aviram Uri; Y. Ronen; Y. Myasoedov; L. S. Levitov; Ernesto Joselevich; A. K. Geim; E. Zeldov

Energy dissipation is a fundamental process governing the dynamics of physical, chemical and biological systems. It is also one of the main characteristics that distinguish quantum from classical phenomena. In particular, in condensed matter physics, scattering mechanisms, loss of quantum information or breakdown of topological protection are deeply rooted in the intricate details of how and where the dissipation occurs. Yet the microscopic behaviour of a system is usually not formulated in terms of dissipation because energy dissipation is not a readily measurable quantity on the micrometre scale. Although nanoscale thermometry has gained much recent interest, existing thermal imaging methods are not sensitive enough for the study of quantum systems and are also unsuitable for the low-temperature operation that is required. Here we report a nano-thermometer based on a superconducting quantum interference device with a diameter of less than 50 nanometres that resides at the apex of a sharp pipette: it provides scanning cryogenic thermal sensing that is four orders of magnitude more sensitive than previous devices—below 1 μK Hz−1/2. This non-contact, non-invasive thermometry allows thermal imaging of very low intensity, nanoscale energy dissipation down to the fundamental Landauer limit of 40 femtowatts for continuous readout of a single qubit at one gigahertz at 4.2 kelvin. These advances enable the observation of changes in dissipation due to single-electron charging of individual quantum dots in carbon nanotubes. They also reveal a dissipation mechanism attributable to resonant localized states in graphene encapsulated within hexagonal boron nitride, opening the door to direct thermal imaging of nanoscale dissipation processes in quantum matter.


Nano Letters | 2016

Defect-Free Carbon Nanotube Coils.

Nitzan Shadmi; Anna Kremen; Yiftach Frenkel; Zachary J. Lapin; Leonardo D. Machado; Sergio B. Legoas; Ora Bitton; Katya Rechav; Ronit Popovitz-Biro; Douglas S. Galvao; A. Jorio; Lukas Novotny; Beena Kalisky; Ernesto Joselevich

Carbon nanotubes are promising building blocks for various nanoelectronic components. A highly desirable geometry for such applications is a coil. However, coiled nanotube structures reported so far were inherently defective or had no free ends accessible for contacting. Here we demonstrate the spontaneous self-coiling of single-wall carbon nanotubes into defect-free coils of up to more than 70 turns with identical diameter and chirality, and free ends. We characterize the structure, formation mechanism, and electrical properties of these coils by different microscopies, molecular dynamics simulations, Raman spectroscopy, and electrical and magnetic measurements. The coils are highly conductive, as expected for defect-free carbon nanotubes, but adjacent nanotube segments in the coil are more highly coupled than in regular bundles of single-wall carbon nanotubes, owing to their perfect crystal momentum matching, which enables tunneling between the turns. Although this behavior does not yet enable the performance of these nanotube coils as inductive devices, it does point a clear path for their realization. Hence, this study represents a major step toward the production of many different nanotube coil devices, including inductors, electromagnets, transformers, and dynamos.


Nano Letters | 2015

Strain Discontinuity, Avalanche, and Memory in Carbon Nanotube Serpentine Systems.

Lucas C. P. A. M. Müssnich; H. Chacham; Jaqueline S. Soares; Newton M. Barbosa Neto; Nitzan Shadmi; Ernesto Joselevich; Luiz Gustavo Cançado; A. Jorio

This work addresses the problem of how a nano-object adheres to a supporting media. The case of study are the serpentine-like structures of single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) grown on vicinal crystalline quartz. We develop in situ nanomanipulation and confocal Raman spectroscopy in such systems, and to explain the results, we propose a dynamical equation in which static friction is treated phenomenologically and implemented as cutoff for velocities, via Heaviside step function and an adhesion force tensor. We demonstrate that the strain profiles observed along the SWNTs are due to anisotropic adhesion, adhesion discontinuities, strain avalanches, and memory effects. The equation is general enough to make predictions for various one- and two-dimensional nanosystems adhered to a supporting media.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Dynamics of the formation of carbon nanotube serpentines.

Leonardo D. Machado; Sergio B. Legoas; Jaqueline S. Soares; Nitzan Shadmi; A. Jorio; Ernesto Joselevich; Douglas S. Galvao


Physica Status Solidi B-basic Solid State Physics | 2011

Raman study of nanotube–substrate interaction using single-wall carbon nanotubes grown on crystalline quartz

Jaqueline S. Soares; Eduardo B. Barros; Nitzan Shadmi; Ernesto Joselevich; A. Jorio


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014

Formation of Ordered vs Disordered Carbon Nanotube Serpentines on Anisotropic vs Isotropic Substrates

Nitzan Shadmi; Noam Geblinger; Ariel Ismach; Ernesto Joselevich


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2015

Guided Growth of Horizontal Single-Wall Carbon Nanotubes on M-Plane Sapphire

Nitzan Shadmi; Ella Sanders; Ellen Wachtel; Ernesto Joselevich


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012

Photoconductive CdSe Nanowire Arrays, Serpentines, and Loops Formed by Electrodeposition on Self-Organized Carbon Nanotubes

X. Wendy Gu; Nitzan Shadmi; Tohar S. Yarden; Hagai Cohen; Ernesto Joselevich


Nanoscale | 2015

Charge transfer between carbon nanotubes on surfaces

Karoline A. S. Araujo; Ana Paula M. Barboza; Thales F. D. Fernandes; Nitzan Shadmi; Ernesto Joselevich; Mario S. C. Mazzoni; Bernardo R. A. Neves

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Ernesto Joselevich

Weizmann Institute of Science

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A. Jorio

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Jaqueline S. Soares

Universidade Federal de Ouro Preto

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Douglas S. Galvao

State University of Campinas

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Leonardo D. Machado

Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte

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Ana Paula M. Barboza

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Bernardo R. A. Neves

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Luiz Gustavo Cançado

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Mario S. C. Mazzoni

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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