Graphene has generated enormous interest after its discovery in 2004, both in the scientific community and recently even in industry. It has been highlighted as one of the strongest materials known with very high electrical and thermal conductivity. Much of the scientific interest in graphene is however related to its peculiar electronic structure. The valence and conduction bands of graphene touch at single points on the corners of its Brillouin zone. Near these points the dispersion is linear which makes the charge carriers behave like relativistic Dirac fermions with zero effective mass, which leads to many of its exceptional electronic properties. Graphene has already been used to build field-effect transistors, but due to the absence...