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Experimental Review of Graphene
Author(s) -
Daniel R. Cooper,
Benjamin D’Anjou,
Nageswara R. Ghattamaneni,
Benjamin Harack,
Michael Hilke,
Alexandre Horth,
Norberto Majlis,
Mathieu Massicotte,
Leron Vandsburger,
Eric Whiteway,
Victor Wen-zhe Yu
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
isrn condensed matter physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-7400
pISSN - 2090-7397
DOI - 10.5402/2012/501686
Subject(s) - graphene , nanotechnology , characterization (materials science) , phonon , materials science , quantum hall effect , field (mathematics) , graduate students , perspective (graphical) , field effect transistor , computer science , transistor , physics , condensed matter physics , quantum mechanics , mathematics , magnetic field , sociology , artificial intelligence , pedagogy , voltage , pure mathematics
This review examines the properties of graphene from an experimental perspective. The intent is to review the most important experimental results at a level of detail appropriate for new graduate students who are interested in a general overview of the fascinating properties of graphene. While some introductory theoretical concepts are provided, including a discussion of the electronic band structure and phonon dispersion, the main emphasis is on describing relevant experiments and important results as well as some of the novel applications of graphene. In particular, this review covers graphene synthesis and characterization, field-effect behavior, electronic transport properties, magneto-transport, integer and fractional quantum Hall effects, mechanical properties, transistors, optoelectronics, graphene-based sensors, and biosensors. This approach attempts to highlight both the means by which the current understanding of graphene has come about and some tools for future contributions.

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