High frequency measurements of shot noise suppression in atomic-scale metal contacts
ORAL
Abstract
Shot noise provides a means of assessing the number and transmission coefficients of transmitting channels in atomic- and molecular-scale junctions. Previous experiments at low temperatures in metal and semiconductor point contacts have demonstrated the expected suppression of shot noise when junction conductance is near an integer multiple of the conductance quantum, $G_{0}\equiv 2e^2/h$. Using high frequency techniques, we demonstrate the high speed acquisition of such data at room temperature in mechanical break junctions. In clean Au contacts conductance histograms with clear peaks at $G_{0}$, $2G_{0}$, and $3G_{0}$ are acquired within hours, and histograms of simultaneous measurements of the shot noise show clear suppression at those conductance values. We describe the dependence of the noise on bias voltage and analyze the noise vs. conductance histograms in terms of a model that averages over transmission coefficients.
*The authors acknowledge support of the Robert A. Welch Foundation grant C-1636 and NSF DMR-0347253.
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