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Optics on Graphene
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Gate-Variable Optical Transitions in Graphene Feng Wang, Yuanbo Zhang, Chuanshan Tian, Caglar Girit, Alex Zettl, Michael Crommie, and Y. Ron Shen, Science 320, 206 (2008). Direct Observation of a Widely Tunable Bandgap in Bilayer Graphene Yuanbo Zhang, Tsung-Ta Tang, Caglar Girit1, Zhao Hao, Michael C. Martin, Alex Zettl1, Michael F. Crommie, Y. Ron Shen and Feng Wang (2009)
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Graphene (A Monolayer of Graphite) 2D Hexagonal lattice
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Electrically: High mobility at room temperature, Large current carrying capability Mechanically: Large Young’s modulus. Thermally: High thermal conductance. Properties of Graphene
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Quantum Hall effect, Barry Phase Ballistic transport, Klein paradox Others Exotic Behaviors
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Quantum Hall Effect Y. Zhang et al, Nature 438, 201(2005)
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Optical Studies of Graphene Optical microscopy contrast; Raman spectroscopy; Landau level spectroscopy. Other Possibilites Spectroscopic probe of electronic structure. Interlayer coupling effect. Electrical gating effect on optical transitions. Others
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Crystalline Structure of Graphite
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Graphene 2D Hexagonal lattice
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Band Structure of Graphene Monolayer P.R.Wallace, Phys.Rev.71,622-634(1947)
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Band Structure of Monolayer Graphere
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Electron Bands of Graphene Monolayer
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Band Structure in Extended BZ
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Relativistic Dirac fermion. Band Structure near K Points eV
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Vertical optical transition Van Hove Singularity Monolayer Bilayer Band Structures of Graphene Monolayer and Bilayer near K E F is adjustable x x
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Exfoliated Graphene Monolayers and Bilayers Monolayer Bilayer Reflecting microscope images. K. S. Novoselov et al., Science 306, 666 (2004). 20 m
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Raman Spectroscopy of Graphene A.S.Ferrari, et al, PRL 97, 187401 (2006) (Allowing ID of monolayer and bilayer)
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Reflection Spectroscopy on Graphene
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Experimental Arrangement Doped Si GrapheneGold 290-nm Silica OPA Det
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Infrared Reflection Spectroscopy to Deduce Absorption Spectrum Differential reflection spectroscopy: Difference between bare substrate and graphene on substrate A B - R/R (R A -R B )/R A versus R A : bare substrate reflectivity R B : substrate + graphene reflectivity 20 m dR/R = -Re[ from substrate from graphene: interband transitons free carrier absorption Re Absorption spectrum
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Spectroscopy on Monolayer Graphene
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Monolayer Spectrum x R/R EFEF C: capacitance
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Experimental Arrangement Doped Si GrapheneGold 290-nm Silica OPA Det VgVg
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Gate Effect on Monolayer Graphene XXX Small density of states close to Dirac point E = 0 Carrier injection by applying gate voltage can lead to large Fermi energy shift. E F can be shifted by ~0.5 eV with V g ~ 50 v; Shifting threshold of transitions by ~1 eV R/R EFEF If V g = V g0 + V mod, then should be a maximum at
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Vary Optical Transitions by Gating Laser beam Vary gate voltage V g. Measure modulated reflectivity due to V mod at V ( Analogous to dI/dV measurement in transport)
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Results in Graphene Monolayer = 350 meV The maximum determines V g for the given E F.
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Mapping Band Structure near K For different , the gate voltage V g determined from maximum is different, following the relation, R/R EFEF Slope of the line allows deduction of slope of the band structure (Dirac cone)
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2D Plot of Monolayer Spectrum ExperimentTheory
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R/R) 60V 50V Vg Strength of Gate Modulation
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Bilayer Graphene (Gate-Tunable Bandgap)
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Band Structure of Graphene Bilayer For symmetric layers, = 0 For asymmetric layer, E. McCann, V.I.Fal’ko, PRL 96, 086805 (2006);
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Doubly Gated Bilayer Asymmetry: D (D b + D t )/2 0 Carrier injection to shift E F : F D = (D b - D t )
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Sample Preparation Effective initial bias due to impurity doping
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Transport Measurement Maximum resistance appears at E F = 0 Lowest peak resistance corresponds to D b = D t = 0 .
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Optical Transitions in Bilayer I: Direct gap transition (tunable, <250 meV) II, IV: Transition between conduction/valence bands (~400 meV, dominated by van Hove singularity) III, V: Transition between conduction and valence bands (~400 meV, relatively weak) If E F =0, then II and IV do not contribute
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Bandstructure Change Induced by Transitions II & IV inactive Transition I active x x IV II
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Differential Bilayer Spectra ( D = 0) (Difference between spectra of D 0 and D=0) I I Larger bandgap stronger transition I because ot higher density of states IV
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Charge Injection without Change of Bandstructure (D fixed) x D = 0 D 0 Transition IV becomes active Peak shifts to lower energy as D increases.. Transition III becomes weaker and shifts to higher energy as D increases. IV III
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Difference Spectra for Different D between D=0.15 v/nm and D=0
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Larger D
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Bandgap versus D
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(dR/R) (dR/R) 60V -(dR/R) -50V is comparable to R/R in value Strength of Gate Modulation
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Summary Grahpene exhibits interesting optical behaviors:. Gate bias can significantly modify optical transitions over a broad spectral range. Single gate bias shifts the Fermi level of monolayer graphene. Spectra provides information on bandstructure, allowing deduction of V F (slope of the Dirac cone in the bandstructure). Double gate bias tunes the bandgap and shifts the Fermi level of bilayer graphene. Widely gate-tunable bandgap of bilayer graphene could be useful in future device applications. Strong gating effects on optical properties of graphene could be useful in infrared optoelectronic devices.
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