Trapping Image State Electrons on Graphene Layers and Islands

ORAL

Abstract

The understanding of graphene-metal interfaces is of utmost importance in graphene transport phenomena. To probe this interface we use time- and angle-resolved two-photon photoemission to map the bound, unoccupied electronic structure of the weakly coupled graphene/Ir(111) system. The energy, dispersion, and lifetime of the lowest three image-potential states are measured. In addition, the weak interaction between Ir and the smooth, epitaxial graphene permits observation of resonant transitions from an unquenched Shockley-type surface state of the Ir substrate to graphene/Ir image-potential states. The image-potential-state lifetimes are comparable to those of mid-gap clean metal surfaces. Evidence of localization of the excited image-state electrons on single-atom-layer graphene islands is provided by coverage-dependent measurements.

*Columbia work supported by DOE grant DE-FG 02-04-ER-46157

Authors

  • Jerry Dadap

    • Columbia University
  • Daniel Niesner

    • Universitat Erlangen-Nurnberg
  • Thomas Fauster

    • Universitat Erlangen-Nurnberg
  • Nader Zaki

    • Columbia University
  • Kevin Knox

    • Columbia University
  • Po-chi Yeh

    • Columbia University
  • Rohan Bhandari

    • Columbia University
  • Richard Osgood

    • Columbia University
    • Columbia University, Laboratory for Light-Surface Interactions, Center for Integrated Science and Engineering
  • Marin Petrovic

    • Institut za Fiziku, Croatia
  • Marko Kralj

    • Institut za Fiziku, Croatia