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Light Scattering Controlled in Graphene

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Controlling the way light is scattered in graphene has been achieved, providing a new tool for the study of these single sheets of carbon that may lead to practical applications for controlling light and electronic states in nanometer-scale devices made of the material.

Scientists at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) and the University of California, Berkeley, led by Feng Wang of LBNL's Materials Sciences Div., made the first direct observation, in graphene, of so-called quantum interference in Raman scattering.


The quantum pathways in Raman scattering are optically stimulated electronic excitations possible only if the initial electronic state is filled and the final state is empty (top). As pathways are removed by doping the graphene and lowering the Fermi energy (bottom), light from scattering may increase or decrease, depending on whether the removed pathways interfere constructively or destructively with the remaining pathways. (Image: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)

Raman scattering occurs in graphene and other crystals when an incoming photon excites an electron, which in turn generates a phonon together with a lower-energy photon.

Quantum particles are as much waves as particles, so they can interfere with one another and even with themselves. The researchers showed that light emission can be controlled by controlling these interference pathways. They present their results in a forthcoming issue of the journal Nature.

"A familiar example of quantum interference in everyday life is antireflective coating on eyeglasses," said Wang, who also is an assistant professor of physics at the university. "A photon can follow two pathways, scattering from the coating or from the glass. Because of its quantum nature, it actually follows both, and the coating is designed so that the two pathways interfere with each other and cancel light that would otherwise cause reflection."


A flake of graphene was grown on copper and transferred onto an insulating substrate of silicon dioxide. The Fermi energy in the graphene was adjusted by varying the gate voltage on the overlying ion gel, which confines a strongly conducting liquid in a polymer matrix. (Image: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)

"The hallmark of quantum mechanics,” he added, “is that if different paths are nondistinguishable, they must always interfere with each other. We can manipulate the interference among the quantum pathways that are responsible for Raman scattering in graphene because of graphene's peculiar electronic structure."

In Raman scattering, the quantum pathways are electronic excitations, which are optically stimulated by incoming photons. These excitations can only happen when the initial electronic state is filled by an electron or other charged particle, and the final electronic state is empty.

Quantum mechanics describes electrons filling a material's available electronic states much as water fills the space in a glass: the "water surface" is called the Fermi level. All the electronic states below it are filled, and all the states above it are empty. The filled states can be reduced by "doping" the material in order to shift the Fermi energy lower. As the Fermi energy is lowered, the electronic states just above it are removed, and the excitation pathways originating from these states are also removed.

"We were able to control the excitation pathways in graphene by electrostatically doping it – applying voltage to drive down the Fermi energy and eliminate selected states," Wang said. "An amazing thing about graphene is that its Fermi energy can be shifted by orders of magnitude larger than conventional materials. This is ultimately due to graphene's two-dimensionality and its unusual electronic bands."


Feng Wang beside a diagram showing how lowering the Fermi energy eliminates quantum pathways in graphene (lower left). The upper plot reveals that when destructively interfering quantum pathways are blocked, Raman scattering intensity is strongly enhanced (pale blue vertical, labeled G). At the same scattering, and at specific values of the Fermi energy, the plot reveals “hot electron luminescence” (labeled H.L.). (Image: Roy Kaltschmidt, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)


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The Fermi energy of undoped graphene is located at a single point, where its electronically filled bands meet its electronically empty bands. To move the Fermi energy appreciably requires a strong electric field.

Team member Rachel Segalman provided the ion gel that was key to the experimental device. An ion gel confines a strongly conducting liquid in a polymer matrix. The gel was laid over a flake of graphene, grown on copper and transferred onto an insulating substrate. The charge in the graphene was adjusted by the gate voltage on the ion gel.

"So by cranking up the voltage, we lowered the graphene's Fermi energy, sequentially getting rid of the higher-energy electrons," Wang said. Eliminating electrons, from the highest energies on down, effectively eliminated the pathways that, when impinged upon by incoming photons, could absorb them and then emit Raman-scattered photons.

"People have always known that quantum interference is important in Raman scattering, but it's been hard to see," Wang said. "Here, it's really easy to see the contribution of each state."

Removing quantum pathways one by one alters the ways they can interfere. The changes are visible in the Raman-scattering intensity emitted by the experimental device when it was illuminated by a beam from a near-IR laser. Although the glow from scattering is much fainter than the near-IR excitation, changes in its brightness can be measured precisely.

"In classical physics, you'd expect to see the scattered light get dimmer as you remove excitation pathways," said Wang, but the results of the experimenter came as a surprise to everyone. "Instead the signal got stronger!"

The scattered light grew brighter as the excitation pathways were reduced – what Wang calls "a canonical signature of destructive quantum interference." Because phonons and scattered photons can be excited by many different, nondistinguishable pathways that interfere with one another, blocking one path can either decrease or increase the light from scattering, depending on whether that pathway was interfering constructively or destructively with the others. In graphene, the lower- and higher-energy pathways interfered destructively. Removing one of them thus increased the brightness of the emission.

"What we've demonstrated is the quantum-interference nature of Raman scattering," Wang said. "It was always there, but it was so hard to see that it was often overlooked."

In a second observation, the researchers found yet another unexpected example of inelastic light scattering. This one, "hot electron luminescence," didn't result from blocked quantum pathways, however.

When a strong voltage is applied and the graphene's Fermi energy is lowered, higher-energy electron states are emptied from the filled band. Electrons that are highly excited by incoming photons, enough to jump to the unfilled band, thus find additional chances to fall back to the now-vacant states in what was the filled band. But these "hot" electrons can fall back only if they emit a photon of the right frequency. The hot electron luminescence observed by the researchers has an integrated intensity 100 times stronger than the Raman scattering.

The research team showed that inelastic light scattering can be controlled by controlling interference between the intermediate states between photon absorption and emission. Manipulating that interference has enabled new kinds of quantum control of chemical reactions, as well as of spintronic states, in which not charge but the quantum spins of electrons are affected. Strongly enhanced Raman scattering can be a boon to nanoscale materials research. Hot luminescence is potentially attractive for optoelectronics and biological research, in which near-IR tags – even weak ones – could be very useful.

"Likewise the phenomenon of hot electron luminescence, because it immediately follows excitation by a probe laser, could become a valuable research tool," Wang said, "particularly for studying ultrafast electron dynamics, one of the chief unusual characteristics of graphene."

For more information, visit: www.lbl.gov 

Published: March 2011
Glossary
optoelectronics
Optoelectronics is a branch of electronics that focuses on the study and application of devices and systems that use light and its interactions with different materials. The term "optoelectronics" is a combination of "optics" and "electronics," reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of this field. Optoelectronic devices convert electrical signals into optical signals or vice versa, making them crucial in various technologies. Some key components and applications of optoelectronics include: ...
AmericasBerkeleyelectronsFeng WangFermi energygraphenehot electron luminescenceImagingLawrence Berkeley National Laboratorylight scatteringmaterials researchoptoelectronicsphotonsquantum interferencequantum pathwaysRachel SegalmanRaman scatteringResearch & TechnologyUniversity of California

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