Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byRalf McKenzie Modified over 9 years ago
1
Graphene: electrons in the flatland Antonio H. Castro Neto Seoul, September 2008
2
Disclaimer Graphene is discovered IQHE measured Andre Geim Kostya Novoselov Philip Kim AHCN, P. Guinea, N. Peres, K. Novoselov, A. Geim, Rev. Mod. Phys. (2008)
3
A brief history of graphene
4
5 m
6
Plus some nanotechnology… 2m2m SiO 2 Si Au contacts graphite optical image SEM image design contacts and mesa
7
t ~ 2.7 eV Some electronic properties of graphene B t’ ~ 0.1 eV A A Unit cell Nearest neighborsNext Nearest neighbors
8
In momentum space Dirac Cone Semi-Metal “Ultra relativistic” Solid State at low speed of light
9
Novoselov et al, Science 306, 666 (2004)
10
Outline Coulomb impurity in graphene Vitor M. Pereira, Johan Nilsson, AHCN Phys.Rev.Lett. 99, 166802 (2007); Vitor M. Pereira, Valeri Kotov, AHCN Phys. Rev. B 78, 085101 (2008). Anderson impurity in graphene Bruno Uchoa, Valeri Kotov, Nuno Peres, AHCN Phys. Rev. Lett. 101, 026805 (2008); Bruno Uchoa, Chiung-Yuan Lin, Nuno Peres, AHCN Phys.Rev.B 77, 035420 (2008). Johan Nilsson Bruno UchoaVitor Pereira Valeri Kotov Nuno Peres
11
Pereira et al., Phys.Rev.Lett. 99, 166802 (2007);
12
3D Schroedinger Coupling
13
Undercritical Supercritical
15
Andrei’s group
17
HIC Neutron stars
19
1 nm
20
E N(E) Anderson’s Impurity Model T>T K
22
Non-interacting: U=0 Broadening Energy V=0
23
Mean-Field
25
The impurity moment can be switched on and off! U = 1 eV n_down V=1eV, e 0 =0.2 eV n_up
26
U = 40 meV U = 0.1 eV
27
Conclusions Impurities in graphene behave in an unusual way when compared to normal metals and semiconductors. One can test theories of nuclear matter under extreme conditions. Control of the magnetic moment formation of transition metals using electric fields.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.