89 research outputs found
Dynamical polarization, screening, and plasmons in gapped graphene
The one-loop polarization function of graphene has been calculated at zero
temperature for arbitrary wavevector, frequency, chemical potential (doping),
and band gap. The result is expressed in terms of elementary functions and is
used to find the dispersion of the plasmon mode and the static screening within
the random phase approximation. At long wavelengths the usual square root
behaviour of plasmon spectra for two-dimensional (2D) systems is obtained. The
presence of a small (compared to a chemical potential) gap leads to the
appearance of a new undamped plasmon mode. At greater values of the gap this
mode merges with the long-wavelength one, and vanishes when the Fermi level
enters the gap. The screening of charged impurities at large distances differs
from that in gapless graphene by slower decay of Friedel oscillations (
instead of ), similarly to conventional 2D systems.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, v2: to match published versio
Integer and Fractional Quantum Hall Effect in Two-Terminal Measurements on Suspended Graphene
We report the observation of the quantized Hall effect in suspended graphene
probed with a two-terminal lead geometry. The failure of earlier Hall-bar
measurements is discussed and attributed to the placement of voltage probes in
mesoscopic samples. New quantized states are found at integer Landau level
fillings outside the sequence 2,6,10.., as well as at a fractional filling
\nu=1/3. Their presence is revealed by plateaus in the two-terminal conductance
which appear in magnetic fields as low as 2 Tesla at low temperatures and
persist up to 20 Kelvin in 12 Tesla. The excitation gaps, extracted from the
data with the help of a theoretical model, are found to be significantly larger
than in GaAs based electron systems.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure
Electronic structure of triangular, hexagonal and round graphene flakes near the Fermi level
The electronic shell structure of triangular, hexagonal and round graphene
quantum dots (flakes) near the Fermi level has been studied using a
tight-binding method. The results show that close to the Fermi level the shell
structure of a triangular flake is that of free massless particles, and that
triangles with an armchair edge show an additional sequence of levels ("ghost
states"). These levels result from the graphene band structure and the plane
wave solution of the wave equation, and they are absent for triangles with an
zigzag edge. All zigzag triangles exhibit a prominent edge state at the Fermi
level, and few low-energy conduction electron states occur both in triangular
and hexagonal flakes due to symmetry reasons. Armchair triangles can be used as
building blocks for other types of flakes that support the ghost states. Edge
roughness has only a small effect on the level structure of the triangular
flakes, but the effect is considerably enhanced in the other types of flakes.
In round flakes, the states near the Fermi level depend strongly on the flake
radius, and they are always localized on the zigzag parts of the edge
Tuning a Circular p-n Junction in Graphene from Quantum Confinement to Optical Guiding
The motion of massless Dirac-electrons in graphene mimics the propagation of
photons. This makes it possible to control the charge-carriers with components
based on geometrical-optics and has led to proposals for an all-graphene
electron-optics platform. An open question arising from the possibility of
reducing the component-size to the nanometer-scale is how to access and
understand the transition from optical-transport to quantum-confinement. Here
we report on the realization of a circular p-n junction that can be
continuously tuned from the nanometer-scale, where quantum effects are
dominant, to the micrometer scale where optical-guiding takes over. We find
that in the nanometer-scale junction electrons are trapped in states that
resemble atomic-collapse at a supercritical charge. As the junction-size
increases, the transition to optical-guiding is signaled by the emergence of
whispering-gallery modes and Fabry-Perot interference. The creation of tunable
junctions that straddle the crossover between quantum-confinement and
optical-guiding, paves the way to novel design-architectures for controlling
electronic transport.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure
Realization of a Tunable Artificial Atom at a Supercritically Charged Vacancy in Graphene
The remarkable electronic properties of graphene have fueled the vision of a
graphene-based platform for lighter, faster and smarter electronics and
computing applications. One of the challenges is to devise ways to tailor its
electronic properties and to control its charge carriers. Here we show that a
single atom vacancy in graphene can stably host a local charge and that this
charge can be gradually built up by applying voltage pulses with the tip of a
scanning tunneling microscope (STM). The response of the conduction electrons
in graphene to the local charge is monitored with scanning tunneling and Landau
level spectroscopy, and compared to numerical simulations. As the charge is
increased, its interaction with the conduction electrons undergoes a transition
into a supercritical regime 6-11 where itinerant electrons are trapped in a
sequence of quasi-bound states which resemble an artificial atom. The
quasi-bound electron states are detected by a strong enhancement of the density
of states (DOS) within a disc centered on the vacancy site which is surrounded
by halo of hole states. We further show that the quasi-bound states at the
vacancy site are gate tunable and that the trapping mechanism can be turned on
and off, providing a new mechanism to control and guide electrons in grapheneComment: 18 pages and 5 figures plus 14 pages and 15 figures of supplementary
information. Nature Physics advance online publication, Feb 22 (2016
Strain-induced Evolution of Electronic Band Structures in a Twisted Graphene Bilayer
Here we study the evolution of local electronic properties of a twisted
graphene bilayer induced by a strain and a high curvature. The strain and
curvature strongly affect the local band structures of the twisted graphene
bilayer; the energy difference of the two low-energy van Hove singularities
decreases with increasing the lattice deformations and the states condensed
into well-defined pseudo-Landau levels, which mimic the quantization of massive
Dirac fermions in a magnetic field of about 100 T, along a graphene wrinkle.
The joint effect of strain and out-of-plane distortion in the graphene wrinkle
also results in a valley polarization with a significant gap, i.e., the
eight-fold degenerate Landau level at the charge neutrality point is splitted
into two four-fold degenerate quartets polarized on each layer. These results
suggest that strained graphene bilayer could be an ideal platform to realize
the high-temperature zero-field quantum valley Hall effect.Comment: 4 figure
Imaging Electronic Correlations in Twisted Bilayer Graphene near the Magic Angle
Twisted bilayer graphene with a twist angle of around 1.1{\deg} features a
pair of isolated flat electronic bands and forms a strongly correlated
electronic platform. Here, we use scanning tunneling microscopy to probe local
properties of highly tunable twisted bilayer graphene devices and show that the
flat bands strongly deform when aligned with the Fermi level. At half filling
of the bands, we observe the development of gaps originating from correlated
insulating states. Near charge neutrality, we find a previously unidentified
correlated regime featuring a substantially enhanced flat band splitting that
we describe within a microscopic model predicting a strong tendency towards
nematic ordering. Our results provide insights into symmetry breaking
correlation effects and highlight the importance of electronic interactions for
all filling factors in twisted bilayer graphene.Comment: Main text 9 pages, 4 figures; Supplementary Information 25 page
Observation of Van Hove singularities in twisted graphene layers
Electronic instabilities at the crossing of the Fermi energy with a Van Hove
singularity in the density of states often lead to new phases of matter such as
superconductivity, magnetism or density waves. However, in most materials this
condition is difficult to control. In the case of single-layer graphene, the
singularity is too far from the Fermi energy and hence difficult to reach with
standard doping and gating techniques. Here we report the observation of
low-energy Van Hove singularities in twisted graphene layers seen as two
pronounced peaks in the density of states measured by scanning tunneling
spectroscopy. We demonstrate that a rotation between stacked graphene layers
can generate Van Hove singularities, which can be brought arbitrarily close to
the Fermi energy by varying the angle of rotation. This opens intriguing
prospects for Van Hove singularity engineering of electronic phases.Comment: 21 pages 5 figure
Dirac cones reshaped by interaction effects in suspended graphene
We report measurements of the cyclotron mass in graphene for carrier
concentrations n varying over three orders of magnitude. In contrast to the
single-particle picture, the real spectrum of graphene is profoundly nonlinear
so that the Fermi velocity describing the spectral slope reaches ~3x10^6 m/s at
n <10^10 cm^-2, three times the value commonly used for graphene. The observed
changes are attributed to electron-electron interaction that renormalizes the
Dirac spectrum because of weak screening. Our experiments also put an upper
limit of ~0.1 meV on the possible gap in graphene
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