199 research outputs found
Edge and waveguide THz surface plasmon modes in graphene micro-ribbons
Surface plasmon modes supported by graphene ribbon waveguides are studied and
classified. The properties of both modes with the field concentration within
the ribbon area (waveguiding modes) and on the edges (edge modes) are
discussed. The waveguide and edge modes are shown to be separated from each
other by a gap in wavenumbers. The even-parity hybridized edge mode results to
be the fundamental electromagnetic mode of the ribbon, possessing also the
lowest losses. All the plasmonic modes in the ribbons have an optimum
frequency, at which the absorption losses are minimum, due to competition
between the plasmon confinement and the frequency dependence of absorption in
graphene.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Surface plasmon enhanced absorption and suppressed transmission in periodic arrays of graphene ribbons
Resonance diffraction in the periodic array of graphene micro-ribbons is
theoretically studied following a recent experiment [L. Ju et al, Nature
Nanotech. 6, 630 (2011)]. Systematic studies over a wide range of parameters
are presented. It is shown that a much richer resonant picture would be
observable for higher relaxation times of charge carriers: more resonances
appear and transmission can be totally suppressed. The comparison with the
absorption cross-section of a single ribbon shows that the resonant features of
the periodic array are associated with leaky plasmonic modes. The
longest-wavelength resonance provides the highest visibility of the
transmission dip and has the strongest spectral shift and broadening with
respect to the single-ribbon resonance, due to collective effects.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Fields radiated by a nanoemitter in a graphene sheet
The extraordinary properties of graphene make it a very promising material for optoelectronics. However, basic attributes of the electromagnetic field in graphene are still unexplored. Here we report on the in-plane fields radiated by a nanoemitter lying on a graphene sheet in terahertz regime, which present a rich dependence on frequency, distance to the source, and orientation of the dipole moment. The field pattern is mainly composed of a core region, dominated by surface plasmons, where the electric field can be several orders of magnitude larger than in vacuum, and an outer region where the field is virtually the same as what it would be in vacuumThe authors acknowledge support from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation under Grants No. MAT2009- 06609-C02 and No. CSD2007-046-NanoLight.es. A.Y.N. acknowledges Juan de la Cierva Grant No. JCI-2008-312
Ballistic Electron Emission Microscopy on CoSi/Si(111) interfaces: band structure induced atomic-scale resolution and role of localized surface states
Applying a Keldysh Green`s function method it is shown that hot electrons
injected from a STM-tip into a CoSi/Si(111) system form a highly focused
beam due to the silicide band structure. This explains the atomic resolution
obtained in recent Ballistic Electron Emission Microscopy (BEEM) experiments.
Localized surface states in the -reconstruction are found to be
responsible for the also reported anticorrugation of the BEEM current. These
results clearly demonstrate the importance of bulk and surface band structure
effects for a detailed understanding of BEEM data.Comment: 5 pages, RevTex, 4 postscript figures,
http://www.icmm.csic.es/Pandres/pedro.ht
Electron pumping in graphene mechanical resonators
The combination of high frequency vibrations and metallic transport in
graphene makes it a unique material for nano-electromechanical devices. In this
letter, we show that graphene-based nano-electromechanical devices are
extremely well suited for charge pumping, due to the sensitivity of its
transport coefficients to perturbations in electrostatic potential and
mechanical deformations, with the potential for novel small scale devices with
useful applications
Continuum elastic modeling of graphene resonators
Starting from an atomistic approach we have derived a hierarchy of
successively more simplified continuum elasticity descriptions for modeling the
mechanical properties of suspended graphene sheets. The descriptions are
validated by applying them to square graphene-based resonators with clamped
edges and studying numerically their mechanical responses. Both static and
dynamic responses are treated. We find that already for deflections of the
order of 0.5{\AA} a theory that correctly accounts for nonlinearities is
necessary and that for many purposes a set of coupled Duffing-type equations
may be used to accurately describe the dynamics of graphene membranes.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
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