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System-Level Design Considerations for Carbon Nanotube Electromechanical Resonators
Author(s) -
Christian Kauth,
Marc Pastre,
Jean-Michel Sallèse,
Maher Kayal
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of sensors
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.399
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 1687-7268
pISSN - 1687-725X
DOI - 10.1155/2013/384643
Subject(s) - carbon nanotube , nanoelectromechanical systems , resonator , network topology , nanotechnology , materials science , feedthrough , carbon nanotube actuators , computer science , electronic engineering , nanotube , engineering , optoelectronics , optical properties of carbon nanotubes , nanomedicine , nanoparticle , operating system
Despite an evermore complete plethora of complex domain-specific semiempirical models, no succinct recipe for large-scale carbon nanotube electromechanical systems design has been formulated. To combine the benefits of these highly sensitive miniaturized mechanical sensors with the vast functionalities available in electronics, we identify a reduced key parameter set of carbon nanotube properties, nanoelectromechanical system design, and operation that steers the sensor’s performance towards system applications, based on open- and closed-loop topologies. Suspended single-walled carbon nanotubes are reviewed in terms of their electromechanical properties with the objective of evaluating orders of magnitude of the electrical actuation and detection mechanisms. Open-loop time-averaging and 1ω or 2ω mixing methods are completed by a new 4ω actuation and detection technique. A discussion on their extension to closed-loop topologies and system applications concludes the analysis, covering signal-to-noise ratio, and the capability to spectrally isolate the motional information from parasitical feedthrough by contemporary electronic read-out techniques

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