We obtain analytical expressions for the electron self-energy and the
electron-phonon coupling in electron-doped graphene using electron-phonon
matrix elements extracted from density functional theory simulations. From the
electron self-energies we calculate angle resolved photoemission spectra. We
demonstrate that the measured kink at ≈−0.2 eV from the Fermi level is
actually composed of two features, one at ≈−0.195 eV due to the
twofold degenerate E2g mode, and a second one at ≈−0.16 eV due to
the A1′ mode. The electron-phonon coupling extracted from the kink
observed in ARPES experiments is roughly a factor of 5.5 larger than the
calculated one. This disagreement can only be partially reconciled by the
inclusion of resolution effects. Indeed we show that a finite resolution
increases the apparent electron-phonon coupling by underestimating the
renormalization of the electron velocity at energies larger than the kinks
positions. The discrepancy between theory and experiments is thus reduced to a
factor of ≈ 2.2. From the linewidth of the calculated ARPES spectra we
obtain the electron relaxation time. A comparison with available experimental
data in graphene shows that the electron relaxation time detected in ARPES is
almost two orders of magnitudes smaller than what measured by other
experimental techniques.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, see also Matteo Calandra and Francesco Mauri,
arXiv:0707.149