Hybrid graphene-topological insulator (TI) devices were fabricated using a
mechanical transfer method and studied via electronic transport. Devices
consisting of bilayer graphene (BLG) under the TI Bi2Se3 exhibit
differential conductance characteristics which appear to be dominated by
tunneling, roughly reproducing the Bi2Se3 density of states. Similar
results were obtained for BLG on top of Bi2Se3, with 10-fold greater
conductance consistent with a larger contact area due to better surface
conformity. The devices further show evidence of inelastic phonon-assisted
tunneling processes involving both Bi2Se3 and graphene phonons. These
processes favor phonons which compensate for momentum mismatch between the TI
Γ and graphene K,K′ points. Finally, the utility of these tunnel
junctions is demonstrated on a density-tunable BLG device, where the
charge-neutrality point is traced along the energy-density trajectory. This
trajectory is used as a measure of the ground-state density of states