Properties of Graphene: A Theoretical Perspective
D.S.L. Abergel, V. Apalkov, J. Berashevich, K. Ziegler, and Tapash, Chakraborty

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive theoretical review of graphene's physical properties, including quantum Hall effects, transport phenomena, and effects of structural modifications, highlighting differences between monolayer and bilayer graphene.
Contribution
It offers an in-depth theoretical analysis of graphene's electronic, magnetic, and optical properties, including recent developments in quantum Hall effects and nanostructures, with comparisons between monolayer and bilayer systems.
Findings
Distinct quantum Hall effects in monolayer and bilayer graphene
Impact of disorder and substrate interactions on electronic properties
Role of edge geometry and doping in nanoribbon behavior
Abstract
In this review, we provide an in-depth description of the physics of monolayer and bilayer graphene from a theorist's perspective. We discuss the physical properties of graphene in an external magnetic field, reflecting the chiral nature of the quasiparticles near the Dirac point with a Landau level at zero energy. We address the unique integer quantum Hall effects, the role of electron correlations, and the recent observation of the fractional quantum Hall effect in the monolayer graphene. The quantum Hall effect in bilayer graphene is fundamentally different from that of a monolayer, reflecting the unique band structure of this system. The theory of transport in the absence of an external magnetic field is discussed in detail, along with the role of disorder studied in various theoretical models. We highlight the differences and similarities between monolayer and bilayer graphene, and…
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