Spatially Resolving Spin-split Edge States of Chiral Graphene Nanoribbons
Chenggang Tao, Liying Jiao, Oleg V. Yazyev, Yen-Chia Chen, Juanjuan, Feng, Xiaowei Zhang, Rodrigo B. Capaz, James M. Tour, Alex Zettl, Steven G., Louie, Hongjie Dai, Michael F. Crommie

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution microscopy and spectroscopy to directly observe and analyze the electronic and magnetic properties of chiral graphene nanoribbons with atomically precise edges, confirming theoretical predictions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed experimental visualization of spin-split edge states in chiral GNRs, linking atomic edge structure to electronic and magnetic behavior.
Findings
Observation of 1D edge states matching theoretical models
Width-dependent splitting indicating magnetic properties
Confirmation of predicted electronic behavior in atomically clean GNRs
Abstract
A central question in the field of graphene-related research is how graphene behaves when it is patterned at the nanometer scale with different edge geometries. Perhaps the most fundamental shape relevant to this question is the graphene nanoribbon (GNR), a narrow strip of graphene that can have different chirality depending on the angle at which it is cut. Such GNRs have been predicted to exhibit a wide range of behaviour (depending on their chirality and width) that includes tunable energy gaps and the presence of unique one-dimensional (1D) edge states with unusual magnetic structure. Most GNRs explored experimentally up to now have been characterized via electrical conductivity, leaving the critical relationship between electronic structure and local atomic geometry unclear (especially at edges). Here we present a sub-nm-resolved scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) and spectroscopy…
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