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Dive into the research topics where Björn Trauzettel is active.

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Featured researches published by Björn Trauzettel.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Sub-Poissonian Shot Noise in Graphene

J. Tworzydlo; Björn Trauzettel; M. Titov; Adam Rycerz; C. W. J. Beenakker

We calculate the mode-dependent transmission probability of massless Dirac fermions through an ideal strip of graphene (length L, width W, no impurities or defects), to obtain the conductance and shot noise as a function of Fermi energy. We find that the minimum conductivity of order e^2/h at the Dirac point (when the electron and hole excitations are degenerate) is associated with a maximum of the Fano factor (the ratio of noise power and mean current). For short and wide graphene strips the Fano factor at the Dirac point equals 1/3, three times smaller than for a Poisson process. This is the same value as for a disordered metal, which is remarkable since the classical dynamics of the Dirac fermions is ballistic.


Nature Physics | 2011

Single valley Dirac fermions in zero-gap HgTe quantum wells

B. Büttner; Chao-Xing Liu; G. Tkachov; Elena G. Novik; Christoph Brune; H. Buhmann; E. M. Hankiewicz; Patrik Recher; Björn Trauzettel; Shou-Cheng Zhang; L. W. Molenkamp

Most of the notable properties of graphene are a result of the cone-like nature of the points in its electronic structure where its conduction and valance bands meet. Similar structures arise in 2D HgTe quantum wells, but without the spin- and valley-degeneracy of graphene; their properties are also likely to be easier to control.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Temperature dependence of the conductivity of ballistic graphene.

Markus Müller; Matthias Bräuninger; Björn Trauzettel

We investigate the temperature dependence of conductivity in ballistic graphene using Landauer transport theory. We obtain results which are qualitatively in agreement with many features recently observed in transport measurements on high mobility suspended graphene. The conductivity sigma at high temperature T and low density n grows linearly with T, while at high n we find sigma approximately square root(|n|) with negative corrections at small T due to the T dependence of the chemical potential. At moderate densities the conductivity is a nonmonotonic function of T and n, exhibiting a minimum at T=0.693 hv square root(|n|) where v is the Fermi velocity. We discuss two kinds of Fabry-Perot oscillations in short nanoribbons and their stability at finite temperatures.


Physical Review B | 2012

Strain-induced band gaps in bilayer graphene

B. Verberck; B. Partoens; F. M. Peeters; Björn Trauzettel

We present a tight-binding investigation of strained bilayer graphene within linear elasticity theory, focusing on the different environments experienced by the A and B carbon atoms of the different sublattices. We find that the inequivalence of the A and B atoms is enhanced by the application of perpendicular strain


Physical Review B | 2007

Photon-assisted electron transport in graphene: Scattering theory analysis

Björn Trauzettel; Ya. M. Blanter; Alberto F. Morpurgo

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Physical Review Letters | 2012

Phonon induced backscattering in helical edge states

Jan Carl Budich; Fabrizio Dolcini; Patrik Recher; Björn Trauzettel

, which provides a physical mechanism for opening a band gap, most effectively obtained when pulling the two graphene layers apart. In addition, perpendicular strain introduces electron-hole asymmetry and can result in linear electronic dispersion near the K-point. When applying lateral strain to one layer and keeping the other layer fixed, we find the opening of an indirect band gap for small deformations. Our findings suggest experimental means for strain-engineered band gaps in bilayer graphene.


Physical Review B | 2006

Parity meter for charge qubits: An efficient quantum entangler

Björn Trauzettel; Andrew N. Jordan; C. W. J. Beenakker; Markus Buttiker

Photon-assisted electron transport in ballistic graphene is analyzed using scattering theory. We show that the presence of an ac signal (applied to a gate electrode in a region of the system) has interesting consequences on electron transport in graphene, where the low energy dynamics is described by the Dirac equation. In particular, such a setup describes a feasible way to probe energy dependent transmission in graphene. This is of substantial interest because the energy dependence of transmission in mesoscopic graphene is the basis of many peculiar transport phenomena proposed in the recent literature. Furthermore, we discuss the relevance of our analysis of ac transport in graphene to the observability of zitterbewegung of electrons that behave as relativistic particles (but with a lower effective speed of light)


Solid State Communications | 2012

The Aharonov-Bohm effect in graphene rings

Jörg Schelter; Patrik Recher; Björn Trauzettel

A single pair of helical edge states as realized at the boundary of a quantum spin Hall insulator is known to be robust against elastic single particle backscattering as long as time reversal symmetry is preserved. However, there is no symmetry preventing inelastic backscattering as brought about by phonons in the presence of Rashba spin orbit coupling. In this Letter, we show that the quantized conductivity of a single channel of helical Dirac electrons is protected even against this inelastic mechanism to leading order. We further demonstrate that this result remains valid when Coulomb interaction is included in the framework of a helical Tomonaga Luttinger liquid.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Group theoretical and topological analysis of the quantum spin Hall effect in silicene

Florian Geissler; Jan Carl Budich; Björn Trauzettel

We propose a realization of a charge parity meter based on two double quantum dots alongside a quantum point contact. Such a device is a specific example of the general class of mesoscopic quadratic quantum measurement detectors previously investigated by Mao et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 056803 (2004)]. Our setup accomplishes entangled state preparation by a current measurement alone, and allows the qubits to be effectively decoupled by pinching off the parity meter. Two applications of the parity meter are discussed: the measurement of Bells inequality in charge qubits and the realization of a controlled NOT gate.


Nature Physics | 2017

Signatures of interaction-induced helical gaps in nanowire quantum point contacts

Sebastian Heedt; N. Traverso Ziani; F. Crépin; W. Prost; St. Trellenkamp; J. Schubert; Detlev Grützmacher; Björn Trauzettel; Th. Schäpers

Abstract This is a review of electronic quantum interference in mesoscopic ring structures based on graphene, with a focus on the interplay between the Aharonov–Bohm effect and the peculiar electronic and transport properties of this material. We first present an overview on recent developments of this topic, both from the experimental as well as the theoretical side. We then review our recent work on signatures of two prominent graphene-specific features in the Aharonov–Bohm conductance oscillations, namely Klein tunneling and specular Andreev reflection. We close with an assessment of experimental and theoretical development in the field and highlight open questions as well as potential directions of the developments in future work.

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Patrik Recher

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Thore Posske

University of Würzburg

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