Magneto-optics in Carbon Nanotubes, Graphene, and Graphite

Matter placed in a strong magnetic field provides a fascinating laboratory in which to study exotic quantum phenomena in a highly controllable manner.  This talk will summarize our recent findings of novel magnetic properties of carbon nanotubes, graphene, and graphite, probed via high-field magneto-optical spectroscopy.  A magnetic field applied parallel to a nanotube introduces an Aharonov-Bohm phase to the electronic wave function, which leads to band gap oscillations, magnetic brightening of dark excitons, and extremely large magnetic...

Matter placed in a strong magnetic field provides a fascinating laboratory in which to study exotic quantum phenomena in a highly controllable manner.  This talk will summarize our recent findings of novel magnetic properties of carbon nanotubes, graphene, and graphite, probed via high-field magneto-optical spectroscopy.  A magnetic field applied parallel to a nanotube introduces an Aharonov-Bohm phase to the electronic wave function, which leads to band gap oscillations, magnetic brightening of dark excitons, and extremely large magnetic susceptibility anisotropy.  In graphene, a magnetic field applied perpendicular to the layer results in Landau quantization with non-equal spacings; we highlight a novel situation where electron cyclotron resonance appears in the magnetic quantum limit even though the sample is p-type.  Finally, for graphite, we observe strongly temperature-dependent, asymmetric spectral lines in electronic Raman spectra in magnetic fields up to 45 T applied along the c-axis.  The magnetic field quantizes the in-plane motion while the out-of-plane motion remains free, effectively reducing the system dimension from three to one.  Optically created electron-hole pairs interact with, or “shake up,” the one-dimensional Fermi sea in the lowest Landau subbands, resulting in Fermi-edge singularities.

Event Details

Date/Time:

  • Date: 
    Tuesday, March 5, 2013 - 10:00am

Location:
MRC Rm. 102 A&B