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The secrets of tunneling through energy barriers
by Staff Writers
Bonn, Germany (SPX) Nov 08, 2011


File image.

Electrons moving in graphene behave in an unusual way, as demonstrated by 2010 Nobel Prize laureates for physics Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov, who performed transport experiments on this one-carbon-atom-thick material.

A review article, just published in EPJ B, explores the theoretical and experimental results to date of electrons tunneling through energy barriers in graphene.As good an electrical conductor at room temperature as copper graphene is, it also outperforms all other known materials as a heat conductor.

It is both very dense due to its honeycomb lattice structure and almost completely transparent, making it suitable, among other applications, for touch screens and light panels.

What could partly explain graphene's properties is that electrons travelling inside the material behave as if they were massless.

Their behavior is described by the so-called massless Dirac equation that is normally used for high-energy particles such as neutrinos nearing the speed of light.

However, electrons in graphene move at a constant speed 300 times smaller than that of light.In this review, P.E. Allain and J.N. Fuchs, both from the Universite Paris-Sud, focus on the tunneling effect occurring when Dirac electrons found in graphene are transmitted through different types of energy barriers.

Contrary to the laws of classical mechanics, which govern larger scale particles that cannot cross energy barriers, electron tunneling is possible in quantum mechanics - though only under restricted conditions, depending on the width and energy height of the barrier.

However, the Dirac electrons found in graphene can tunnel through energy barriers regardless of their width and energy height; a phenomenon called Klein tunneling, described theoretically for 3D massive Dirac electrons by the Swedish physicist Oskar Klein in 1929.

Graphene was the first material in which Klein tunneling was observed experimentally, as massive Dirac electrons required energy barriers too large to be observed.

Allain PE, Fuchs JN (2011). Klein tunneling in graphene: optics with massless electrons. European Physical Journal B (EPJ B). DOI 10.1140/epjb/e2011-20351-3. Klein tunneling in graphene: optics with massless electrons

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NANO TECH
Study compares techniques for doping graphene for device and interconnect fabrication
Atlanta GA (SPX) Nov 08, 2011
Nanotechnology researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have conducted the first direct comparison of two fundamental techniques that could be used for chemically doping sheets of two-dimensional graphene for the fabrication of devices and interconnects. Chemical doping is routinely used in conventional three-dimensional semiconductors to control the density of electron carriers ... read more


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