Crossed graphene nanoribbons as beam splitters and mirrors for electron quantum optics
Sofia Sanz, Pedro Brandimarte, G\'eza Giedke, Daniel S\'anchez-Portal, and Thomas Frederiksen

TL;DR
This paper theoretically investigates crossed graphene nanoribbons as potential beam splitters and mirrors for electrons, analyzing their transport properties and robustness for quantum optical applications.
Contribution
It provides a systematic theoretical analysis of electron transport in crossed GNR devices, identifying conditions for beam splitting, mirroring, and filtering.
Findings
Narrow zigzag GNRs and AA-stacked armchair GNRs can act as near 50-50 beam splitters.
Wider ribbons function as electron mirrors or wavelength-dependent filters.
Transport properties are robust against variations in angle, strain, separation, and electrostatic potential.
Abstract
We analyze theoretically 4-terminal electronic devices composed of two crossed graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) and show that they can function as beam splitters or mirrors. These features are identified for electrons in the low-energy region where a single valence or conduction band is present. Our modeling is based on orbital tight-binding with Slater--Koster type matrix elements fitted to accurately reproduce the low-energy bands from density functional theory calculations. We analyze systematically all devices that can be constructed with either zigzag or armchair GNRs in AA and AB stackings. From Green's function theory the elastic electron transport properties are quantified as a function of the ribbon width. We find that devices composed of relatively narrow zigzag GNRs and AA-stacked armchair GNRs are the most interesting candidates to realize electron beam splitters with a…
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