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Dive into the research topics where Simone Dehm is active.

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Featured researches published by Simone Dehm.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2010

Electroluminescence from a single nanotube-molecule-nanotube junction

Christoph W. Marquardt; Sergio Grunder; Alfred Błaszczyk; Simone Dehm; Frank Hennrich; H. v. Löhneysen; Marcel Mayor; Ralph Krupke

The positioning of single molecules between nanoscale electrodes has allowed their use as functional units in electronic devices. Although the electrical transport in such devices has been widely explored, optical measurements have been restricted to the observation of electroluminescence from nanocrystals and nanoclusters and from molecules in a scanning tunnelling microscope setup. In this Letter, we report the observation of electroluminescence from the core of a rod-like molecule between two metallic single-walled carbon nanotube electrodes forming a rigid solid-state device. We also develop a simple model to explain the onset voltage for electroluminescence. These results suggest new characterization and functional possibilities, and demonstrate the potential of carbon nanotubes for use in molecular electronics.


ACS Nano | 2010

Toward single-chirality carbon nanotube device arrays.

Aravind Vijayaraghavan; Frank Hennrich; Ninette Stürzl; Michael Engel; Marc Ganzhorn; Matti Oron-Carl; Christoph W. Marquardt; Simone Dehm; Sergei Lebedkin; Manfred M. Kappes; Ralph Krupke

The large-scale integration of devices consisting of individual single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNT), all of the same chirality, is a critical step toward their electronic, optoelectronic, and electromechanical application. Here, the authors realize two related goals, the first of which is the fabrication of high-density, single-chirality SWCNT device arrays by dielectrophoretic assembly from monodisperse SWCNT solution obtained by polymer-mediated sorting. Such arrays are ideal for correlating measurements using various techniques across multiple identical devices, which is the second goal. The arrays are characterized by voltage-contrast scanning electron microscopy, electron transport, photoluminescence (PL), and Raman spectroscopy and show identical signatures as expected for single-chirality SWCNTs. In the assembled nanotubes, a large D peak in Raman spectra, a large dark-exciton peak in PL spectra as well as lowered conductance and slow switching in electron transport are all shown to be correlated to each other. By comparison to control samples, we conclude that these are the result of scattering from electronic and not structural defects resulting from the polymer wrapping, similar to what has been predicted for DNA wrapping.


ACS Nano | 2009

Dielectrophoretic Assembly of High-Density Arrays of Individual Graphene Devices for Rapid Screening

Aravind Vijayaraghavan; Calogero Sciascia; Simone Dehm; A. Lombardo; Alessandro Bonetti; A. C. Ferrari; Ralph Krupke

We establish the use of dielectrophoresis for the directed parallel assembly of individual flakes and nanoribbons of few-layer graphene into electronic devices. This is a bottom-up approach where source and drain electrodes are prefabricated and the flakes are deposited from a solution using an alternating electric field applied between the electrodes. These devices are characterized by scanning electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and electron transport measurements. They are electrically active and their current carrying capacity and subsequent failure mechanism is revealed. Akin to carbon nanotubes, we show that the dielectrophoretic deposition is self-limiting to one flake per device and is scalable to ultralarge-scale integration densities, thereby enabling the rapid screening of a large number of devices.


Nano Letters | 2010

Phonon-assisted electroluminescence from metallic carbon nanotubes and graphene.

Stephanie Essig; Christoph W. Marquardt; Aravind Vijayaraghavan; M. Ganzhorn; Simone Dehm; Frank Hennrich; Fung Suong Ou; Alexander A. Green; C. Sciascia; Francesco Bonaccorso; K. P. Bohnen; H. v. Löhneysen; Manfred M. Kappes; Pulickel M. Ajayan; Mark C. Hersam; A. C. Ferrari; Ralph Krupke

We report on light emission from biased metallic single-wall carbon nanotube (SWNT), multiwall carbon nanotube (MWNT) and few-layer graphene (FLG) devices. SWNT devices were assembled from tubes with different diameters in the range 0.7-1.5 nm. They emit light in the visible spectrum with peaks at 1.4 and 1.8 eV. Similar peaks are observed for MWNT and FLG devices. We propose that this light emission is due to phonon-assisted radiative decay from populated pi* band states at the M point to the Fermi level at the K point. Since for most carbon nanotubes as well as for graphene the energy of unoccupied states at the M point is close to 1.6 eV, the observation of two emission peaks at approximately 1.6 +/- approximately 0.2 eV could indicate radiative decay under emission or absorption of optical phonons, respectively.


ACS Nano | 2011

Hydrogen sensing with diameter- and chirality-sorted carbon nanotubes.

Marc Ganzhorn; Aravind Vijayaraghavan; Simone Dehm; Frank Hennrich; Alexander A. Green; Maximilian Fichtner; Achim Voigt; M. Rapp; H. v. Löhneysen; Mark C. Hersam; Manfred M. Kappes; Ralph Krupke

The work function of palladium is known to be sensitive to hydrogen by the formation of a surface dipole layer or Pd hydride. One approach to detect such a change in the work function can be based on the formation of a Schottky barrier between the palladium metal and a semiconductor. Here, we study the hydrogen sensitivity of Schottky barrier field-effect transistors made for the first time from diameter- and chirality-sorted semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (s-SWNTs) in contact with Pd electrodes. We observe an unrivaled 100-fold change in the on-state conductance at 100 ppm H2 compared to air for devices with s-SWNT and diameters between 1 and 1.6 nm. Hydrogen sensing is not observed for devices of Pd-contacted few-layer graphene (FLG), as expected due to the absence of a significant Schottky barrier. Unexpectedly, we observe also a vanishing sensitivity for small-diameter SWNTs. We explain this observation by changes in the nanotube work function caused by spillover and chemisorption of atomic hydrogen onto small-diameter nanotubes. We also observe that long-term sensing stability is only achieved if the gate voltage is inverted periodically. Under constant gate bias, the sensitivity reduces with time, which we relate to gate screening by accumulated charges in the substrate.


ACS Nano | 2015

A General Route toward Complete Room Temperature Processing of Printed and High Performance Oxide Electronics

Tessy Theres Baby; Suresh Kumar Garlapati; Simone Dehm; Marc Häming; Robert Kruk; Horst Hahn; Subho Dasgupta

Critical prerequisites for solution-processed/printed field-effect transistors (FETs) and logics are excellent electrical performance including high charge carrier mobility, reliability, high environmental stability and low/preferably room temperature processing. Oxide semiconductors can often fulfill all the above criteria, sometimes even with better promise than their organic counterparts, except for their high process temperature requirement. The need for high annealing/curing temperatures renders oxide FETs rather incompatible to inexpensive, flexible substrates, which are commonly used for high-throughput and roll-to-roll additive manufacturing techniques, such as printing. To overcome this serious limitation, here we demonstrate an alternative approach that enables completely room-temperature processing of printed oxide FETs with device mobility as large as 12.5 cm(2)/(V s). The key aspect of the present concept is a chemically controlled curing process of the printed nanoparticle ink that provides surprisingly dense thin films and excellent interparticle electrical contacts. In order to demonstrate the versatility of this approach, both n-type (In2O3) and p-type (Cu2O) oxide semiconductor nanoparticle dispersions are prepared to fabricate, inkjet printed and completely room temperature processed, all-oxide complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) invertors that can display significant signal gain (∼18) at a supply voltage of only 1.5 V.


Advanced Materials | 2011

A scalable, CMOS-compatible assembly of ambipolar semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotube devices

Marc Ganzhorn; Aravind Vijayaraghavan; Alexander A. Green; Simone Dehm; Achim Voigt; M. Rapp; Mark C. Hersam; Ralph Krupke

Semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes are integrated into high-density arrays using dielectrophoresis, which is a CMOS-compatible, bottom-up assembly technique. The devices are statistically analyzed by voltage-contrast scanning electron microscopy and electron transport measurements. Annealing and the choice of parylene substrate are shown to improve device performance.


Nano Letters | 2008

Reversible metal-insulator transitions in metallic single-walled carbon nanotubes.

Christoph W. Marquardt; Simone Dehm; Aravind Vijayaraghavan; Sabine Blatt; Frank Hennrich; Ralph Krupke

We report on reversible metal to insulator transitions in metallic single-walled carbon nanotube devices induced by repeated electron irradiation of a nanotube segment. The transition from a low-resistive, metallic state to a high-resistive, insulating state by 3 orders of magnitude was monitored by electron transport measurements. Application of a large voltage bias leads to a transition back to the original metallic state. Both states are stable in time, and transitions are fully reversible and reproducible. The data is evidence for a local perturbation of the nanotube electronic system by removable trapped charges in the underneath substrate and excludes structural damage of the nanotube. The result has implications for using electron-beam lithography in nanotube device fabrication.


Optics Express | 2011

Electroluminescence from chirality-sorted (9,7)-semiconducting carbon nanotube devices

Martin H. P. Pfeiffer; Ninette Stürzl; Christoph W. Marquardt; Michael Engel; Simone Dehm; Frank Hennrich; Manfred M. Kappes; Uli Lemmer; Ralph Krupke

We have measured the electroluminescence and photoluminescence of (9,7)-semiconducting carbon nanotube devices and demonstrate that the electroluminescence wavelength is determined by the nanotubes chiral index (n,m). The devices were fabricated on Si₃N₄-membranes by dielectrophoretic assembly of tubes from monochiral dispersion. Electrically driven (9,7)-devices exhibit a single Lorentzian-shaped emission peak at 825 nm in the visible part of the spectrum. The emission could be assigned to the excitonic E22 interband-transition by comparison of the electroluminescence spectra with corresponding photoluminescence excitation maps. We show a linear dependence of the EL peak width on the electrical current, and provide evidence for the inertness of Si₃N₄ surfaces with respect to the nanotubes optical properties.


Small | 2015

Ink-Jet Printed CMOS Electronics from Oxide Semiconductors

Suresh Kumar Garlapati; Tessy Theres Baby; Simone Dehm; Mohammed Hammad; Venkata Sai Kiran Chakravadhanula; Robert Kruk; Horst Hahn; Subho Dasgupta

Complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology with high transconductance and signal gain is mandatory for practicable digital/analog logic electronics. However, high performance all-oxide CMOS logics are scarcely reported in the literature; specifically, not at all for solution-processed/printed transistors. As a major step toward solution-processed all-oxide electronics, here it is shown that using a highly efficient electrolyte-gating approach one can obtain printed and low-voltage operated oxide CMOS logics with high signal gain (≈21 at a supply voltage of only 1.5 V) and low static power dissipation.

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Ralph Krupke

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Frank Hennrich

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Subho Dasgupta

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Horst Hahn

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Manfred M. Kappes

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Benjamin S. Flavel

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Suresh Kumar Garlapati

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Christoph W. Marquardt

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Robert Kruk

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Aravind Vijayaraghavan

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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