S
S. Roth
Researcher at Max Planck Society
Publications - 285
Citations - 27078
S. Roth is an academic researcher from Max Planck Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Carbon nanotube & Polyacetylene. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 281 publications receiving 25195 citations.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Field-effect mobility anisotropy in PDA-PTS single crystals
Ju-Ro Lee,A. N. Aleshin,A. N. Aleshin,Dae-Won Kim,Hyo-Pyo Lee,Y. S. Kim,Gerhard Wegner,Volker Enkelmann,S. Roth,Yun-Ho Park +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the currentvoltage characteristics and the field effect mobility of polydiacetylene single crystals in the temperature range 4-K-300-K and found that the current parallel to the PDA backbone is ∼ 10-1000 times higher than that perpendicular.
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A supramolecular approach to the parallel alignment of nonlinear optical molecules
TL;DR: In this article, a supramolecular synthesis utilizing perhydrotriphenylene (PHTP) as an inclusion host compound has proven to be an efficient method of aligning guest nonlinear optical (NLO) molecules in a parallel fashion.
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Magnetoresistance and Corbino resistance of iodine doped-polyacetylene
TL;DR: In this paper, the collinear magneto-and coaxial Corbino resistance of iodine doped polyacetylene have been measured at 4.2 K for doping levels from 7% to 30%.
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Well-organized phthalocyanine Langmuir-Blodgett films incorporated into symmetrical (metal/thin organic film/metal) sandwich structures
TL;DR: The formation of well-ordered Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) films of a peripherally octa(pentyloxy)-substituted palladium phthalocyanine is reported in this paper.
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Single-electron transistor mediated by C60 insertion inside a carbon nanotube
H. Y. Yu,H. Y. Yu,Dong-Kak Lee,S. H. Lee,Sihan Kim,Sangwook Lee,Y.W. Park,U. Dettlaff-Weglikowskaand,S. Roth +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the properties of C60 encapsulated peapod are investigated at various temperatures from room temperature down to T = 1.8K. The current behavior induced by the applied gate and source-drain voltage shows that C60 peapods exhibit single-electron transistor properties.