T. Phanindra Sai
Indian Institute of Science
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Publication
Featured researches published by T. Phanindra Sai.
Applied Physics Letters | 2008
Amrita Singh; T. Phanindra Sai; Arindam Ghosh
We experimentally demonstrate that low-frequency electrical noise in silver nanowires is heavily suppressed when the crystal structure of the nanowires is hexagonal closed pack (hcp) rather than face centered cubic (fcc). Using a low-potential electrochemical method we have grown single crystalline silver nanowires with hcp crystal structure, in which the noise at room temperature is two to six orders of magnitude lower than that in the conventional fcc nanowires of the same diameter. We suggest that motion of dislocations is probably the primary source of electrical noise in metallic nanowires, which is strongly diminished in hcp crystals.
Nature Communications | 2016
Paritosh Karnatak; T. Phanindra Sai; Srijit Goswami; Subhamoy Ghatak; Sanjeev Kaushal; Arindam Ghosh
The impact of the intrinsic time-dependent fluctuations in the electrical resistance at the graphene–metal interface or the contact noise, on the performance of graphene field-effect transistors, can be as adverse as the contact resistance itself, but remains largely unexplored. Here we have investigated the contact noise in graphene field-effect transistors of varying device geometry and contact configuration, with carrier mobility ranging from 5,000 to 80,000 cm2 V−1 s−1. Our phenomenological model for contact noise because of current crowding in purely two-dimensional conductors confirms that the contacts dominate the measured resistance noise in all graphene field-effect transistors in the two-probe or invasive four-probe configurations, and surprisingly, also in nearly noninvasive four-probe (Hall bar) configuration in the high-mobility devices. The microscopic origin of contact noise is directly linked to the fluctuating electrostatic environment of the metal–channel interface, which could be generic to two-dimensional material-based electronic devices.
Langmuir | 2015
R. Venkatesh; Subhajit Kundu; Avradip Pradhan; T. Phanindra Sai; Arindam Ghosh; N. Ravishankar
Ultrathin Au nanowires (∼2 nm diameter) are interesting from a fundamental point of view to study structure and electronic transport and also hold promise in the field of nanoelectronics, particularly for sensing applications. Device fabrication by direct growth on various substrates has been useful in demonstrating some of the potential applications. However, the realization of practical devices requires device fabrication strategies that are fast, inexpensive, and efficient. Herein, we demonstrate directed assembly of ultrathin Au nanowires over large areas across electrodes using ac dielectrophoresis with a mechanistic understanding of the process. On the basis of the voltage and frequency, the wires either align in between or across the contact pads. We exploit this assembly to produce an array of contacting wires for statistical estimation of electrical transport with important implications for future nanoelectronic/sensor applications.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2017
Amogh Kinikar; T. Phanindra Sai; Semonti Bhattacharyya; Adhip Agarwala; Tathagata Biswas; Sanjoy K. Sarker; H. R. Krishnamurthy; Manish Jain; Vijay B. Shenoy; Arindam Ghosh
The zigzag edges of single- or few-layer graphene are perfect one-dimensional conductors owing to a set of gapless states that are topologically protected against backscattering. Direct experimental evidence of these states has been limited so far to their local thermodynamic and magnetic properties, determined by the competing effects of edge topology and electron-electron interaction. However, experimental signatures of edge-bound electrical conduction have remained elusive, primarily due to the lack of graphitic nanostructures with low structural and/or chemical edge disorder. Here, we report the experimental detection of edge-mode electrical transport in suspended atomic-scale constrictions of single and multilayer graphene created during nanomechanical exfoliation of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite. The edge-mode transport leads to the observed quantization of conductance close to multiples of G0 = 2e2/h. At the same time, conductance plateaux at G0/2 and a split zero-bias anomaly in non-equilibrium transport suggest conduction via spin-polarized states in the presence of an electron-electron interaction.
MRS Proceedings | 2007
T. Phanindra Sai; A. K. Raychaudhuri
Molecular wires of charge transfer molecules were formed by co-evaporating the 7 7 8 8-Tetracyanoquinodimethane [TCNQ] (acceptor) and Tetrathiafulvalene [TTF] (donor) molecules across prefabricated metal electrodes. Molecular wires of TTF TCNQ were also formed by evaporating single complex of TTF:TCNQ across prefabricated metal electrodes The prefabricated metal electrodes were made using electron beam lithography on SiO2 and glass cover slip substrates. Even though TTF: TCNQ wires grown from both co-evaporation and evaporation techniques show semiconductor like behavior in temperature dependence of resistance they show different activation energies due the difference in stoichiometry of TTF and TCNQ.
Advanced Materials | 2018
Kallol Roy; Tanweer Ahmed; Harshit Dubey; T. Phanindra Sai; Ranjit Kashid; Shruti Maliakal; Kimberly Hsieh; Saquib Shamim; Arindam Ghosh
Van der Waals hybrids of graphene and transition metal dichalcogenides exhibit an extremely large response to optical excitation, yet counting of photons with single-photon resolution is not achieved. Here, a dual-gated bilayer graphene (BLG) and molybdenum disulphide (MoS2 ) hybrid are demonstrated, where opening a band gap in the BLG allows extremely low channel (receiver) noise and large optical gain (≈1010 ) simultaneously. The resulting device is capable of unambiguous determination of the Poissonian emission statistics of an optical source with single-photon resolution at an operating temperature of 80 K, dark count rate 0.07 Hz, and linear dynamic range of ≈40 dB. Single-shot number-resolved single-photon detection with van der Waals heterostructures may impact multiple technologies, including the linear optical quantum computation.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2013
Kallol Roy; Medini Padmanabhan; Srijit Goswami; T. Phanindra Sai; Gopalakrishnan Ramalingam; Srinivasan Raghavan; Arindam Ghosh
Solid State Communications | 2013
Kallol Roy; Medini Padmanabhan; Srijit Goswami; T. Phanindra Sai; Sanjeev Kaushal; Arindam Ghosh
MRS Proceedings | 2013
Medini Padmanabhan; Kallol Roy; Srijit Goswami; T. Phanindra Sai; Gopalakrishnan Ramalingam; Sanjeev Kaushal; Srinivasan Raghavan; Arindam Ghosh
Physical Review Letters | 2018
Md. Ali Aamir; Paritosh Karnatak; Aditya Jayaraman; T. Phanindra Sai; T. V. Ramakrishnan; Rajdeep Sensarma; Arindam Ghosh