Published in

IOP Publishing, Nanotechnology, 11(35), p. 115502, 2023

DOI: 10.1088/1361-6528/ad13c0

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Electrical, thermal and noise properties of platinum-carbon free-standing nanowires designed as nanoscale resistive thermal devices

This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

Abstract Platinum-carbon (PtC) composite nanowires were fabricated using focused electron beam induced deposition and postprocessed, and their performance as a nanoscale resistive thermal device (RTD) was evaluated. Nanowires were free-standing and deposited on a dedicated substrate to eliminate the influence of the substrate itself and of the halo effect on the results. The PtC free-standing nanowires were postprocessed to lower their electrical resistance using electron beam irradiation and thermal annealing using Joule heat both separately and combined. Postprocessed PtC free-standing nanowires were characterized to evaluate their noise figure (NF) and thermal coefficients at the temperature range from 30 K to 80 °C. The thermal sensitivity of RTD was lowered with the reduced resistance but simultaneously the NF improved, especially with electron-beam irradiation. The temperature measurement resolution achievable with the PtC free-standing nanowires was 0.1 K in 1 kHz bandwidth.