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Dive into the research topics where Brian Standley is active.

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Featured researches published by Brian Standley.


Nano Letters | 2008

Graphene-based atomic-scale switches.

Brian Standley; Wenzhong Bao; Hang Zhang; Jehoshua Bruck; Chun Ning Lau; Marc Bockrath

Graphenes remarkable mechanical and electrical properties, combined with its compatibility with existing planar silicon-based technology, make it an attractive material for novel computing devices. We report the development of a nonvolatile memory element based on graphene break junctions. Our devices have demonstrated thousands of writing cycles and long retention times. We propose a model for device operation based on the formation and breaking of carbon atomic chains that bridge the junctions. We demonstrate information storage based on the concept of rank coding, in which information is stored in the relative conductance of graphene switches in a memory cell.


Nature Physics | 2011

Stacking-dependent band gap and quantum transport in trilayer graphene

Wenzhong Bao; Lei Jing; Jairo Velasco; Y.-W. Lee; Gang Liu; D. Tran; Brian Standley; Mehmet Aykol; Stephen B. Cronin; Dmitry Smirnov; Mikito Koshino; Edward McCann; Marc Bockrath; Chun Ning Lau

Graphene is an extraordinary two-dimensional (2D) system with chiral charge carriers and fascinating electronic, mechanical and thermal properties. In multilayer graphene, stacking order provides an important yet rarely explored degree of freedom for tuning its electronic properties. For instance, Bernal-stacked trilayer graphene (B-TLG) is semi-metallic with a tunable band overlap, and rhombohedral-stacked trilayer graphene (r-TLG) is predicted to be semiconducting with a tunable band gap. These multilayer graphenes are also expected to exhibit rich novel phenomena at low charge densities owing to enhanced electronic interactions and competing symmetries. Here we demonstrate the dramatically different transport properties in TLG with different stacking orders, and the unexpected spontaneous gap opening in charge neutral r-TLG. At the Dirac point, B-TLG remains metallic, whereas r-TLG becomes insulating with an intrinsic interaction-driven gap ~6 meV. In magnetic fields, well-developed quantum Hall (QH) plateaux in r-TLG split into three branches at higher fields. Such splitting is a signature of the Lifshitz transition, a topological change in the Fermi surface, that is found only in r-TLG. Our results underscore the rich interaction-induced phenomena in trilayer graphene with different stacking orders, and its potential towards electronic applications.


Nano Letters | 2012

Graphene-graphite oxide field-effect transistors.

Brian Standley; Anthony Mendez; Emma Schmidgall; Marc Bockrath

Graphenes high mobility and two-dimensional nature make it an attractive material for field-effect transistors. Previous efforts in this area have used bulk gate dielectric materials such as SiO(2) or HfO(2). In contrast, we have studied the use of an ultrathin layered material, graphenes insulating analogue, graphite oxide. We have fabricated transistors comprising single or bilayer graphene channels, graphite oxide gate insulators, and metal top-gates. The graphite oxide layers show relatively minimal leakage at room temperature. The breakdown electric field of graphite oxide was found to be comparable to SiO(2), typically ~1-3 × 10(8) V/m, while its dielectric constant is slightly higher, κ ≈ 4.3.


Nano Letters | 2014

Graphene Nanoelectromechanical Systems as Stochastic-Frequency Oscillators

Tengfei Miao; Sinchul Yeom; Peng Wang; Brian Standley; Marc Bockrath

We measure the quality factor Q of electrically driven few-layer graphene drumhead resonators, providing an experimental demonstration that Q ∼ 1/T, where T is the temperature. We develop a model that includes intermodal coupling and tensioned graphene resonators. Because the resonators are atomically thin, out-of-plane fluctuations are large. As a result, Q is mainly determined by stochastic frequency broadening rather than frictional damping, in analogy to nuclear magnetic resonance. This model is in good agreement with experiment. Additionally, at larger drives the resonance line width is enhanced by nonlinear damping, in qualitative agreement with recent theory of damping by radiation of in-plane phonons. Parametric amplification produced by periodic thermal expansion from the ac drive voltage yields an anomalously large line width at the largest drives. Our results contribute toward a general framework for understanding the mechanisms of dissipation and spectral line broadening in atomically thin membrane resonators.


Surface Science | 2011

Strain-induced pseudo-magnetic fields and charging effects on CVD-grown graphene

N.-C. Yeh; M.L. Teague; Sinchul Yeom; Brian Standley; R.T.-P. Wu; David A. Boyd; Marc Bockrath

Atomically resolved imaging and spectroscopic characteristics of graphene grown by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) on copper are investigated by means of scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy (STM/STS). For CVD-grown graphene remaining on the copper substrate, the monolayer carbon structures exhibit ripples and appear strongly strained, with different regions exhibiting different lattice structures and electronic density of states (DOS). In particular, ridges appear along the boundaries of different lattice structures, which exhibit excess charging effects. Additionally, the large and non-uniform strain induces pseudo-magnetic field up to ~ 50 T, as manifested by the DOS peaks at quantized energies that correspond to pseudo-magnetic field-induced integer and fractional Landau levels. In contrast, for graphene transferred from copper to SiO_2 substrates after the CVD growth, the average strain on the whole diminishes, so do the corresponding charging effects and pseudo-magnetic fields except for sample areas near topological defects. These findings suggest feasible nano-scale “strain engineering” of the electronic states of graphene by proper design of the substrates and growth conditions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Evidence for a spontaneous gapped state in ultraclean bilayer graphene

Wenzhong Bao; Jairo Velasco; Fan Zhang; Lei Jing; Brian Standley; Dmitry Smirnov; Marc Bockrath; A. H. MacDonald; Chun Ning Lau

Bilayer graphene (BLG) at the charge neutrality point (CNP) is strongly susceptible to electronic interactions, and expected to undergo a phase transition into a state with spontaneous broken symmetries. By systematically investigating a large number of singly- and doubly-gated bilayer graphene (BLG) devices, we show that an insulating state appears only in devices with high mobility and low extrinsic doping. This insulating state has an associated transition temperature Tc~5K and an energy gap of ~3 meV, thus strongly suggesting a gapped broken symmetry state that is destroyed by very weak disorder. The transition to the intrinsic broken symmetry state can be tuned by disorder, out-of-plane electric field, or carrier density.At the charge neutrality point, bilayer graphene (BLG) is strongly susceptible to electronic interactions and is expected to undergo a phase transition to a state with spontaneously broken symmetries. By systematically investigating a large number of single-and double-gated BLG devices, we observe a bimodal distribution of minimum conductivities at the charge neutrality point. Although σmin is often approximately 2–3 e2/h (where e is the electron charge and h is Planck’s constant), it is several orders of magnitude smaller in BLG devices that have both high mobility and low extrinsic doping. The insulating state in the latter samples appears below a transition temperature Tc of approximately 5 K and has a T = 0 energy gap of approximately 3 meV. Transitions between these different states can be tuned by adjusting disorder or carrier density.


Nano Letters | 2012

Visualizing electrical breakdown and ON/OFF states in electrically switchable suspended graphene break junctions.

Hang Zhang; Wenzhong Bao; Zeng Zhao; Jhao-Wun Huang; Brian Standley; Gang Liu; Fenglin Wang; Philip Kratz; Lei Jing; Marc Bockrath; Chun Ning Lau

Narrow gaps are formed in suspended single- to few-layer graphene devices using a pulsed electrical breakdown technique. The conductance of the resulting devices can be programmed by the application of voltage pulses, with voltages of 2.5 to ~4.5 V, corresponding to an ON pulse, and ~8 V, corresponding to an OFF pulse. Electron microscope imaging of the devices shows that the graphene sheets typically remain suspended and that the device conductance tends to zero when the observed gap is large. The switching rate is strongly temperature dependent, which rules out a purely electromechanical switching mechanism. This observed switching in suspended graphene devices strongly suggests a switching mechanism via atomic movement and/or chemical rearrangement and underscores the potential of all-carbon devices for integration with graphene electronics.


219th ECS Meeting | 2011

Nano-Scale Strain-Induced Giant Pseudo-Magnetic Fields and Charging Effects in CVD-Grown Graphene on Copper

N.-C. Yeh; Marcus Teague; Renee T. Wu; Sinchul Yeom; Brian Standley; David Boyd; Marc Bockrath

Scanning tunneling microscopic and spectroscopic (STM/STS) studies of graphene grown by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) on copper reveal that the monolayer carbon structures remaining on copper are strongly strained and rippled, with different regions exhibiting different lattice structures and local electronic density of states (LDOS). The large and non-uniform strain induces pseudo-magnetic field up to ∼ 50 Tesla, as manifested by the integer and fractional pseudo-magnetic field quantum Hall effects (IQHE and FQHE) in the LDOS of graphene. Additionally, ridges appear along the boundaries of different lattice structures, which exhibit excess charging effects. For graphene transferred from copper to SiO_2 substrates after the CVD growth, the average strain and the corresponding charging effects and pseudo-magnetic fields become much reduced. These findings suggest the feasibility of strain-engineering of graphene-based nano-electronics.


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012

Transport in Bilayer Graphene at the Charge Neutrality Point

Wenzhong Bao; Jairo Velasco; Fan Zhang; Lei Jing; Brian Standley; Dmitry Smirnov; A. H. MacDonald; Marc Bockrath; C. N. Lau


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2010

Graphene based switch

Hang Zhang; Wenzhong Bao; Zeng Zhao; Gang Liu; Jairo Volesco; Lei Jing; Brian Standley; Marc Bockrath; C. N. Lau

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Marc Bockrath

University of California

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Lei Jing

University of California

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Chun Ning Lau

University of California

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Emma Schmidgall

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Dmitry Smirnov

Florida State University

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Gang Liu

University of California

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Hang Zhang

University of California

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Jairo Velasco

University of California

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Sinchul Yeom

California Institute of Technology

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A. H. MacDonald

University of Texas at Austin

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