Department of Physics

School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics

Yuri Gartstein
Associate Professor
ECN 2.914
972-883-2834

Yuri Gartstein, Ph.D.

Education

M.S., Engineering Physics, Tashkent Polytechnic Institute, USSR
Ph.D., Physics, Institute for Spectroscopy, USSR Academy of Sciences

Overview

Yuri Gartstein’s scientific background is theoretical condensed matter physics with an extensive research experience in the theory and modeling of electronic, optical and transport properties of organic systems, subjects of actively developing organic/molecular electronics and some of nanotechnologies. His latest research concentrated around physical properties of carbon nanotubes. Theoretical understanding of properties of novel materials and systems, especially at nano scale, will continue to be at forefront of his interests as being both scientifically profound and important for future technologies.
In addition to academic studies, Yuri Gartstein had an enriching “real-life” experience during seven year tenure as a Member of R&T of Xerox, where he managed to get several patents and was involved in direct support of a major technology program.

Research Interests

Yuri Gartstein’s research interests cover various aspects of theory and modeling of electronic, optical, transport and mechanical properties of novel and synthetic materials and structures, such as carbon nanotubes, organic solids, conjugated polymers, disordered molecular systems and unconventional superconductors. He is also interested in physics of devices on the basis of such materials, examples being organic light emitting diodes, solar cells and electromechanical actuators. A more recent addition to his interests is left-handed (negative refraction) materials.

Among Yuri Gartstein’s representative contributions are the work done in collaboration with M.J. Rice and E.M. Conwell on excitons, optical absorption and charge separation in conjugated polymers and on Monte Carlo simulations of high-field hopping transport and charge carrier injection in molecular systems that have been featured in the last edition of M. Pope's and C. Swenberg's monograph "Electronic Processes in Organic Crystals and Polymers."

research image, Dr. Gartstein

As a result of collaboration with scientists of UTD-NanoTech Institute, Yuri Gartstein’s recent research has been geared towards physics of carbon nanotubes, which is exemplified here with the theory of electro-mechanical actuation in single-wall carbon nanotubes. Our study of charge-induced deformations of carbon nanotubes showed that deformations are anisotropic and strongly depend on the nanotube geometry, the latter represented in the illustrative figure by difference (N-M) of nanotube indices on the x-axis. The upper panel of the figure displays changes in the nanotube length per doping level, the middle panel shows changes in the nanotube radius, and the lower panel shows torsional shear. The conceptual insight achieved in our analytical analysis has been later confirmed by full-blown ab-initio calculations. As is transparent from the picture, the model predicted a much stronger longitudinal response for nanotubes of certain geometries (especially so called zig-zag tubes) making them potentially attractive candidates for (nano) actuators. At the same time, the model explains why enhanced actuation cannot be utilized until efficient separation of nanotubes of different geometries becomes experimentally feasible – in the currently available bundles of nanotubes, the effect is averaged out.

Publications:

  1. Yu.N. Gartstein, “Charges on semiconducting nanotubes in polar media: polarons and excitons”, Physics Letters A (2005), in press.
  2. M.J. Rice and Yu.N. Gartstein, “Excitonic ground state of the half-filled Peierls insulator”, Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter 17 (2005) 4615.
  3. Yu.N. Gartstein, “Vibrations of single-wall carbon nanotubes: lattice models and low-frequency dispersion”, Physics Letters A327 (2004) 83.
  4. Yu.N. Gartstein, A.A. Zakhidov, and R.H. Baughman, “Mechanical and electromechanical coupling in carbon nanotube distortions”, Physical Review B68 (2003) 115415.
  5. Yu.N. Gartstein, A.A. Zakhidov, and R.H. Baughman, “Charge induced anisotropic distortions of semiconducting and metallic carbon nanotubes”, Physical Review Letters 89 (2002) 045503.
  6. Y. Gartstein, “Method and apparatus using traveling wave potential waveforms for separation of opposite sign charged particles”, US Patent 6,272,296 (August 2001).
  7. Yu.N. Gartstein and J.G. Shaw, “Many-particle effects in traveling electrostatic wave transport'', Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics 32 (1999) 2176.
  8. Yu.N. Gartstein and E.M. Conwell, “Field-dependent thermal injection into a disordered molecular insulator”, Chemical Physics Letters 255 (1996) 93.
  9. M.J. Rice and Yu.N. Gartstein, “Theory of photoinduced charge transfer in a molecularly doped conjugated polymer”, Physical Review B53 (1996) 10764.
  10. Yu.N. Gartstein and E.M. Conwell, “High-field hopping mobility in molecular systems with spatially correlated energetic disorder”, Chemical Physics Letters 245 (1995) 351.

 

  • Updated: October 12, 2011
November 20, 2006