Atomically precise electronics operating at optical frequencies require tools that can characterize them on their intrinsic length and time scales to guide device design. Lightwave-driven scanning tunnelling microscopy is a promising technique towards this purpose. It achieves simultaneous sub-ångström and sub-picosecond spatio-temporal resolution through ultrafast coherent control by single-cycle field transients that are coupled to the scanning probe tip from free space. Here, we utilize lightwave-driven terahertz scanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy to investigate atomically precise seven-atom-wide armchair graphene nanoribbons on a gold surface at ultralow tip heights, unveiling highly localized wavefunctions that are inacces...
As a potential candidate for replacing silicon (Si) as a next-generation semiconducting material, at...
Some of the most intriguing properties of graphene are predicted for specifically designed nanostruc...
For interaction of light with condensed-matter systems, we show with simulations that ultrafast elec...
Here, the authors perform lightwave-driven terahertz scanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy...
Tailored nanostructures can confine electromagnetic waveforms in extremely sub-wavelength volumes, o...
Watching a single molecule move on its intrinsic timescale has been one of the central goals of mode...
The electronic structure of atomically precise armchair graphene nanoribbons of width N=7 (7-AGNRs) ...
This dissertation demonstrates the dry contact transfer of atomically precise graphene nanoribbons o...
This thesis characterizes different kinds of graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) from an electronic point of...
Graphene, a monoatomic layer of hexagonal lattice carbon, has been of interest to researchers in r...
We investigate the optical response of graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) using the broadband nonlinear gen...
We report an atomically resolved scanning tunneling microscopy investigation of the edges of graphen...
Graphene is a thin-film carbon material that has immense potential as a key ingredient in new nanoel...
We show that Raman and photoluminescence spectroscopies carried out in an ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) env...
With the advent of atomically precise synthesis and consequent precise tailoring of their electronic...
As a potential candidate for replacing silicon (Si) as a next-generation semiconducting material, at...
Some of the most intriguing properties of graphene are predicted for specifically designed nanostruc...
For interaction of light with condensed-matter systems, we show with simulations that ultrafast elec...
Here, the authors perform lightwave-driven terahertz scanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy...
Tailored nanostructures can confine electromagnetic waveforms in extremely sub-wavelength volumes, o...
Watching a single molecule move on its intrinsic timescale has been one of the central goals of mode...
The electronic structure of atomically precise armchair graphene nanoribbons of width N=7 (7-AGNRs) ...
This dissertation demonstrates the dry contact transfer of atomically precise graphene nanoribbons o...
This thesis characterizes different kinds of graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) from an electronic point of...
Graphene, a monoatomic layer of hexagonal lattice carbon, has been of interest to researchers in r...
We investigate the optical response of graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) using the broadband nonlinear gen...
We report an atomically resolved scanning tunneling microscopy investigation of the edges of graphen...
Graphene is a thin-film carbon material that has immense potential as a key ingredient in new nanoel...
We show that Raman and photoluminescence spectroscopies carried out in an ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) env...
With the advent of atomically precise synthesis and consequent precise tailoring of their electronic...
As a potential candidate for replacing silicon (Si) as a next-generation semiconducting material, at...
Some of the most intriguing properties of graphene are predicted for specifically designed nanostruc...
For interaction of light with condensed-matter systems, we show with simulations that ultrafast elec...