An undergraduate laboratory experiment on quantized conductance in nanocontacts

We describe an undergraduate laboratory experiment on conductance steps observed to occur near integer multiples of 2e2/h as nanocontacts form and break between gold wires in loose contact. This experimental arrangement was first described by Costa-Kramer et al. [Surf. Sci. 342, L1144 (1995)]. A simple op-amp circuit in conjunction with an inexpensive storage oscilloscope suffice to observe the steps. The experiment may be extended by interfacing to a computer, which accumulates a histogram of conductance values as the wires are brought into and out of contact many times. The histogram shows peaks near integer multiples of 2e2/h. We emphasize the pedagogical issues involved in bringing an experiment from forefront condensed-matter physics research into the undergraduate laboratory.

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