Nanoscale Time-resolved Spectroscopy of Electrically Gated Graphene Nanoribbons
ORAL
Abstract
Graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) have shown many interesting electrical and optical properties. We have developed a novel optical spectrometer capable of probing the nonlinear optical response of nanoparticles with dimensions ~10 nm or less, over a wide range of frequencies[1]. The experiments take advantage of strong nonlinearities in SrTiO3 and the ability to “write” conductive nanowires at the LaAlO3/SrTiO3 (LAO/STO) interface with ~10 nm gaps that are co-located with a GNR. We will probe GNRs individually under the influence of large electric fields (~1 MV/cm) with various geometries of electric gates that are both static and dynamic to open a bandgap in the GNR and create a single electron state hosted in the GNR.
[1] L. Chen, et al., Light: Science & Appl. 8, 24 (2019).
[1] L. Chen, et al., Light: Science & Appl. 8, 24 (2019).
*Funding acknowledgement: ONR GNR Qubit MURI. C.-B.E. acknowledges support from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation’s EPiQS Initiative (grant GBMF9065) and the Vannevar Bush Faculty Fellowship (ONR N00014-20-1-2844). Transport measurement at the University of Wisconsin–Madison was supported by the US Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences (BES), under award number DE-FG02-06ER46327.
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Presenters
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Melanie Dieterlen
- University of Pittsburgh