Low-temperature electronic transport of manganese silicide shell-protected single crystal nanowires for nanoelectronics applications.
Alexsandro Dos Santos E da CruzMarcos V Puydinger Dos SantosRaul B CampanelliPascoal G PagliusoJefferson BettiniKleber R PirotaFanny BéronPublished in: Nanoscale advances (2021)
Recently, core-shell nanowires have been proposed as potential electrical connectors for nanoelectronics components. A promising candidate is Mn 5 Si 3 nanowires encapsulated in an oxide shell, due to their low reactivity and large flexibility. In this work, we investigate the use of the one-step metallic flux nanonucleation method to easily grow manganese silicide single crystal oxide-protected nanowires by performing their structural and electrical characterization. We find that the fabrication method yields a room-temperature hexagonal crystalline structure with the c -axis along the nanowire. Moreover, the obtained nanowires are metallic at low temperature and low sensitive to a strong external magnetic field. Finally, we observe an unknown electron scattering mechanism for small diameters. In conclusion, the one-step metallic flux nanonucleation method yields intermetallic nanowires suitable for both integration in flexible nanoelectronics as well as low-dimensionality transport experiments.