4 research outputs found

    A tunable electronic beam splitter realized with crossed graphene nanoribbons

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    Graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) are promising components in future nanoelectronics due to the large mobility of graphene electrons and their tunable electronic band gap in combination with recent experimental developments of on-surface chemistry strategies for their growth. Here, we explore a prototype 4-terminal semiconducting device formed by two crossed armchair GNRs (AGNRs) using state-of-the-art first-principles transport methods. We analyze in detail the roles of intersection angle, stacking order, inter-GNR separation, GNR width, and finite voltages on the transport characteristics. Interestingly, when the AGNRs intersect at θ=60°, electrons injected from one terminal can be split into two outgoing waves with a tunable ratio around 50% and with almost negligible back-reflection. The split electron wave is found to propagate partly straight across the intersection region in one ribbon and partly in one direction of the other ribbon, i.e., in analogy with an optical beam splitter. Our simulations further identify realistic conditions for which this semiconducting device can act as a mechanically controllable electronic beam splitter with possible applications in carbon-based quantum electronic circuits and electron optics. We rationalize our findings with a simple model suggesting that electronic beam splitters can generally be realized with crossed GNRs

    Band Depopulation of Graphene Nanoribbons Induced by Chemical Gating with Amino Groups

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    Altres ajuts: Xunta de Galicia (ED431G/09); Gobierno Vasco (IT1246-19, IT-1255-19); Diputación Foral de Gipuzkoa (RED 2019-096); CERCA Program/Generalitat de Catalunya; Program Interreg V-A España-Francia-Andorra (194/16 TNI)The electronic properties of graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) can be precisely tuned by chemical doping. Here we demonstrate that amino (NH) functional groups attached at the edges of chiral GNRs (chGNRs) can efficiently gate the chGNRs and lead to the valence band (VB) depopulation on a metallic surface. The NH-doped chGNRs are grown by on-surface synthesis on Au(111) using functionalized bianthracene precursors. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy resolves that the NH groups significantly upshift the bands of chGNRs, causing the Fermi level crossing of the VB onset of chGNRs. Through density functional theory simulations we confirm that the hole-doping behavior is due to an upward shift of the bands induced by the edge NH groups

    Study of the Influence of Localized Vibrational Modes in Charge Transport Properties at Nanoscale Systems

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    Com o rápido avanço das técnicas experimentais observado nas últimas décadas, a fabricação de sistemas nanoestruturados se tornou uma realidade. Nessa escala de grandeza, as interações entre elétrons e vibrações nucleares têm um papel importante no transporte eletrônico, podendo causar a perda de coerência de fase dos elétrons, a abertura de novos canais de condução e a supressão de canais puramente elásticos. Neste trabalho, o problema do transporte eletrônico em escala nanométrica foi tratado considerando as interações elétron-fônon, o que resultou na implementação de ferramentas computacionais para simulação realística de materiais. O transporte eletrônico foi abordado por meio do formalismo das Funções de Green Fora do Equilíbrio, onde as interações elétron-fônon foram tratadas por diferentes modelos. Para considerar o efeito dessas interações no transporte, é necessário, em princípio, incluir um termo de autoenergia de espalhamento na Hamiltoniana do sistema. Contudo, a forma exata dessa autoenergia é desconhecida e aproximações são necessárias. O primeiro efeito da interação elétron-fônon estudado foi a perda de coerência de fase, o que foi abordado pelo modelo fenomenológico das sondas de Büttiker [1]. Foram realizadas duas implementações diferentes deste modelo, a primeira na forma usual, onde se considera uma aproximação elástica para o cálculo da corrente, e a segunda por meio de uma nova proposta sem a aproximação elástica. Entretanto, como a autoenergia de interação utilizada não contém informação a respeito da estrutura dos fônons, o modelo produz somente um alargamento do canal de condutância, simulando apenas o efeito de perda de coerência de fase dos elétrons devido à interação com fônons do material. Para poder incluir as informações sobre a estrutura dos fônons, foi desenvolvido o programa PhOnonS ITeratIVE VIBRATIONS, para o cálculo das frequências e dos modos vibracionais de materiais e para calcular a matriz de acoplamento elétron-fônon, a partir de métodos de primeiros princípios. No cálculo da matriz de acoplamento elétron-fônon, além da implementação do código algumas intervenções foram realizadas no programa SIESTA [2,3] (uma implementação da Teoria do Funcional da Densidade). Outra abordagem para a interação elétron-fônon consiste em expandir a autoenergia de interação perturbativamente em diagramas de Feynman até a primeira ordem, o que é convencionalmente chamado de primeira aproximação de Born. Essa aproximação, assim como a sua versão autoconsistente, no qual uma classe mais ampla de diagramas é considerada, foram incorporadas ao programa SMEAGOL [4], um código de transporte eletrônico ab initio baseado na combinação DFT-NEGF e que utiliza como plataforma do cálculo da estrutura eletrônica o código SIESTA. Essas implementações, em conjunto com diversas mudanças realizadas no código SMEAGOL, deram origem ao programa Inelastic SMEAGOL para cálculos de transporte inelástico ab initio. Nessa busca por uma descrição mais realista dos dispositivos eletrônicos, outro aspecto que deve ser considerado é o fato de que os dispositivos muitas vezes podem alcançar escalas de comprimento da ordem de 100 nm com um grande número de defeitos aleatoriamente distribuídos, o que pode levar a um novo regime fundamental de transporte, a saber, o de localização de Anderson [5]. Neste trabalho, foi desenvolvido o programa Inelastic DISORDER, que permite calcular, por primeiros princípios, as propriedades de transporte elástico e inelástico de sistemas com dezenas de milhares de átomos com um grande número de defeitos posicionados aleatoriamente. O método combina cálculos de estrutura eletrônica via DFT com o formalismo NEGF para o transporte, onde as interações elétron-fônon são incluídas por meio de teoria de perturbação com relação à matriz de acoplamento elétron-fônon (Lowest Order Expansion). O método desenvolvido foi aplicado ao estudo de nanofitas de grafeno com impurezas hidroxílicas. Observou-se que, ao incluir a interação elétron-fônon, as propriedades de transporte sofrem mudanças significativas, indicando que estas interações podem influenciar nos efeitos de localização por desordem. [1] M. Büttiker. Phys. Rev. B 33(5), 30203026 (1986). [2] E. Artacho, D. Sánchez-Portal, P. Ordejón, A. García e J. M. Soler. Phys. Stat. Sol. (b) 215, 809817 (1999). [3] J. M. Soler, E. Artacho, J. D. Gale, A. García, J. Junquera, P. Ordejón e D. Sánchez- Portal. J. Phys. Cond. Mat. 14, 27452779 (2002). [4] A. R. Rocha, V. M. García-Suárez, S. W. Bailey, C. J. Lambert, J. Ferrer e S. Sanvito. Phys. Rev. B 73, 085414 (2006). [5] P. W. Anderson. Phys. Rev. 109, 1492 (1958).With the fast improvement of experimental techniques over the past decades, the synthesis of nanoscale systems has become a reality. At this length scales, the interaction between electrons and ionic vibrations plays an important role in electronic transport, and may cause the loss of the electron\'s phase coherence, the opening of new conductance channels and the suppression of purely elastic ones. In this work the electronic transport problem at nanoscale was addressed considering the electron-phonon interactions, resulting on the development of computational tools for realistic simulations of materials. The electronic transport was approached with the Non-Equilibrium Green\'s Function formalism, where electron-phonon interactions were addressed by different models. To take into account the interaction\'s effects, one needs in principle to include a self-energy scattering term in the system Hamiltonian. Nevertheless, the exact form of this self-energy is unknown and approximations are required. The first effect from electron-phonon interactions dealt was the loss of phase coherence, which was approached by the Büttiker\'s probes phenomenological model [1]. Two different implementations of this model were performed, the first in the standard form, where an elastic approximation is considered in order to compute the current, and the second by a new method without the elastic approximation. However, since the interaction self-energy used doesn\'t contains any information about the phonon\'s structure, this model only produces a broadening at the conducting channels, simulating just the effect of loss of phase coherence from the electrons due to their interactions with the phonons. In order to be able to include information about the phonon\'s structure, the computational code PhOnonS ITeratIVE VIBRATIONS was developed, for calculating the frequencies and vibrational modes of the materials and to compute the electron-phonon coupling matrix, from first principles methods. In the calculation of the electron-phonon coupling matrix, besides the code implementation some changes were performed at the SIESTA program [2,3] (a Density Functional Theory implementation). Another approach for the electron-phonon interactions consists of expanding the interaction self-energy perturbatively in Feynman diagrams until the first order, what is conventionally called the first Born approximation. This approximation, together with its self-consistent version, where a wider class of diagrams are regarded, have been incorporated into the SMEAGOL program [4], an ab initio electronic transport code based on the combination DFT-NEGF which uses the SIESTA code as a platform for electronic structure calculations. The implementations, together with many changes performed on SMEAGOL code, gave rise to the Inelastic SMEAGOL program for inelastic ab initio transport calculations. In this search for a more realistic description of electronic devices, another feature that should be taken into account is the fact that these devices most often can reach the 100 nm length scale with a large number of randomly distributed defects, which can lead to a fundamentally new transport regime, namely the Anderson localization regime [5]. In this work, the program Inelastic DISORDER was developed, which allows one to compute, by first principles, the elastic and inelastic transport properties from systems with tens of thousands of atoms with a large number of randomly positioned defects. The method combines electronic structure calculations via DFT with the NEGF formalism for transport, where the electron-phonon interactions are included with perturbation theory on the electron-phonon coupling matrix (Lowest Order Expansion). The developed method was applied to the study of graphene nanoribbons with joint attachment of hydroxyl impurities. It was observed that, by including the electron-phonon interaction, the transport properties experience significant changes, indicating that these interactions can influence the effects of localization by disorder. [1] M. Büttiker. Phys. Rev. B 33(5), 30203026 (1986). [2] E. Artacho, D. Sánchez-Portal, P. Ordejón, A. García, and J. M. Soler. Phys. Stat. Sol. (b) 215, 809817 (1999). [3] J. M. Soler, E. Artacho, J. D. Gale, A. García, J. Junquera, P. Ordejón, and D. Sánchez- Portal. J. Phys. Cond. Mat. 14, 27452779 (2002). [4] A. R. Rocha, V. M. García-Suárez, S. W. Bailey, C. J. Lambert, J. Ferrer, and S. Sanvito. Phys. Rev. B 73, 085414 (2006). [5] P. W. Anderson. Phys. Rev. 109, 1492 (1958)

    Band Depopulation of Graphene Nanoribbons Induced by Chemical Gating with Amino Groups

    No full text
    Altres ajuts: Xunta de Galicia (ED431G/09); Gobierno Vasco (IT1246-19, IT-1255-19); Diputación Foral de Gipuzkoa (RED 2019-096); CERCA Program/Generalitat de Catalunya; Program Interreg V-A España-Francia-Andorra (194/16 TNI)The electronic properties of graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) can be precisely tuned by chemical doping. Here we demonstrate that amino (NH) functional groups attached at the edges of chiral GNRs (chGNRs) can efficiently gate the chGNRs and lead to the valence band (VB) depopulation on a metallic surface. The NH-doped chGNRs are grown by on-surface synthesis on Au(111) using functionalized bianthracene precursors. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy resolves that the NH groups significantly upshift the bands of chGNRs, causing the Fermi level crossing of the VB onset of chGNRs. Through density functional theory simulations we confirm that the hole-doping behavior is due to an upward shift of the bands induced by the edge NH groups
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