Scientists confirm one-dimensional electron behavior in phosphorus chains
Atom-thin phosphorus chains have been shown to host true 1D electrons—and squeezing them tighter could turn them metallic.
Researchers at BESSY II have, for the first time, experimentally confirmed that a material can exhibit truly one-dimensional electronic properties. The team studied short chains of phosphorus atoms that naturally arrange themselves at specific angles on a silver surface. By applying advanced measurement and analysis techniques, they separated the signals coming from chains aligned in different directions. This careful work showed that each individual chain behaves as a genuine one-dimensional electronic system. The findings also point to a dramatic shift in behavior depending on how closely the chains are spaced. When the chains are farther apart, the material acts as a semiconductor. If packed tightly together, however, calculations predict it would behave like a metal.
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