Quantum transport of Dirac fermions in selected graphene nanosystems away from the charge-neutrality point
Adam Rycerz

TL;DR
This paper investigates quantum transport in graphene nanosystems away from the charge-neutrality point, revealing how conductance and shot noise vary with potential profiles and edge configurations, using both analytical and numerical methods.
Contribution
It demonstrates that graphene-specific transport features persist away from neutrality and explores how potential profiles influence conductance and noise in various nanosystems.
Findings
Conductance can be tuned from sub-Sharvin to Sharvin values.
Shot noise is amplified compared to standard Sharvin contacts.
Edge scattering effects are less significant than sample-lead interface scattering.
Abstract
Peculiar electronic properties of graphene, including the universal dc conductivity and the pseudodiffusive shot noise, are usually attributed to a small vicinity of the charge-neutrality point, away from which electron's effective mass raises, and nanostructures in graphene start to behave similarly to familiar Sharvin contacts in semiconducting heterostructures hosting two-dimensional electron gas. Using the effective Dirac equation for low-energy excitations it can be shown that, as long as abrupt potential steps separate the sample area from the leads, graphene-specific features can be identified even relatively far from the charge-neutrality point. Namely, the conductance is reduced, comparing to the standard Sharvin value, whereas the shot noise is amplified. Here, we confront the results of earlier analytic considerations with numerical simulations of quantum transport on the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGraphene research and applications · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Advancements in Battery Materials
