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Dive into the research topics where Felix Fromm is active.

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Featured researches published by Felix Fromm.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

The quasi-free-standing nature of graphene on H-saturated SiC(0001)

Florian Speck; Johannes Jobst; Felix Fromm; Markus Ostler; Daniel Waldmann; Martin Hundhausen; Heiko B. Weber; Th. Seyller

We report on an investigation of quasi-free-standing graphene on 6H-SiC(0001) which was prepared by intercalation of hydrogen under the buffer layer. Using infrared absorption spectroscopy, we prove that the SiC(0001) surface is saturated with hydrogen. Raman spectra demonstrate the conversion of the buffer layer into graphene which exhibits a slight tensile strain and short range defects. The layers are hole doped (p = 5.0 − 6.5 × 1012 cm−2) with a carrier mobility of 3100 cm2/Vs at room temperature. Compared to graphene on the buffer layer, a strongly reduced temperature dependence of the mobility is observed for graphene on H-terminated SiC(0001) which justifies the term “quasi-free-standing.”


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Direct view of hot carrier dynamics in graphene.

Jens Christian Johannsen; Søren Ulstrup; Federico Cilento; A. Crepaldi; M. Zacchigna; Cephise Cacho; I. C. Edmond Turcu; E. Springate; Felix Fromm; Christian Raidel; Thomas Seyller; F. Parmigiani; M. Grioni; Philip Hofmann

The ultrafast dynamics of excited carriers in graphene is closely linked to the Dirac spectrum and plays a central role for many electronic and optoelectronic applications. Harvesting energy from excited electron-hole pairs, for instance, is only possible if these pairs can be separated before they lose energy to vibrations, merely heating the lattice. Until now, the hot carrier dynamics in graphene could only be accessed indirectly. Here, we present a dynamical view on the Dirac cone by time- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. This allows us to show the quasi-instant thermalization of the electron gas to a temperature of ≈2000 K, to determine the time-resolved carrier density, and to disentangle the subsequent decay into excitations of optical phonons and acoustic phonons (directly and via supercollisions).


Nano Letters | 2012

Long Spin Relaxation Times in Wafer Scale Epitaxial Graphene on SiC(0001)

Thomas Maassen; J. Jasper van den Berg; Natasja IJbema; Felix Fromm; Thomas Seyller; Rositza Yakimova; Bart J. van Wees

We developed an easy, upscalable process to prepare lateral spin-valve devices on epitaxially grown monolayer graphene on SiC(0001) and perform nonlocal spin transport measurements. We observe the longest spin relaxation times τ(S) in monolayer graphene, while the spin diffusion coefficient D(S) is strongly reduced compared to typical results on exfoliated graphene. The increase of τ(S) is probably related to the changed substrate, while the cause for the small value of D(S) remains an open question.


Applied Physics Express | 2013

Epitaxial growth and electronic properties of large hexagonal graphene domains on Cu(111) thin film

Hiroki Ago; Kenji Kawahara; Yui Ogawa; Shota Tanoue; Mark A. Bissett; Masaharu Tsuji; Hidetsugu Sakaguchi; Roland Koch; Felix Fromm; Thomas Seyller; Katsuyoshi Komatsu; Kazuhito Tsukagoshi

Large hexagonal single-crystalline domains of single-layer graphene are epitaxially grown by ambient-pressure chemical vapor deposition over a thin Cu(111) film deposited on c-plane sapphire. The hexagonal graphene domains with a maximum size of 100 µm are oriented in the same direction due to the epitaxial growth. Reflecting high crystallinity, a clear band structure with the Dirac cone is observed by angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy (ARPES), and a high carrier mobility exceeding 4,000 cm2 V-1 s-1 is obtained on SiO2/Si at room temperature. Our epitaxial approach combined with large domain growth is expected to contribute to future electronic applications.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Ultrafast Dynamics of Massive Dirac Fermions in Bilayer Graphene

Søren Ulstrup; Jens Christian Johannsen; Federico Cilento; Jill A. Miwa; A. Crepaldi; M. Zacchigna; Cephise Cacho; Richard T. Chapman; E. Springate; Samir Mammadov; Felix Fromm; Christian Raidel; Thomas Seyller; F. Parmigiani; M. Grioni; P. D. C. King; Philip Hofmann

Bilayer graphene is a highly promising material for electronic and optoelectronic applications since it is supporting massive Dirac fermions with a tunable band gap. However, no consistent picture of the gaps effect on the optical and transport behavior has emerged so far, and it has been proposed that the insulating nature of the gap could be compromised by unavoidable structural defects, by topological in-gap states, or that the electronic structure could be altogether changed by many-body effects. Here, we directly follow the excited carriers in bilayer graphene on a femtosecond time scale, using ultrafast time- and angle-resolved photoemission. We find a behavior consistent with a single-particle band gap. Compared to monolayer graphene, the existence of this band gap leads to an increased carrier lifetime in the minimum of the lowest conduction band. This is in sharp contrast to the second substate of the conduction band, in which the excited electrons decay through fast, phonon-assisted interband transitions.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Contribution of the buffer layer to the Raman spectrum of epitaxial graphene on SiC(0001)

Felix Fromm; M. H. Oliveira Jr; Alejandro Molina-Sanchez; Martin Hundhausen; João Marcelo Jordão Lopes; H. Riechert; Ludger Wirtz; Thomas Seyller

We report a Raman study of the so-called buffer layer with (6 p 3◊ 6 p 3)R30 periodicity which forms the intrinsic interface structure between epitaxial graphene and SiC(0001). We show that this interface structure leads to a non-vanishing signal in the Raman spectrum at frequencies in the range of the D- and G-band of graphene and discuss its shape and intensity. Ab initio phonon calculations reveal that these features can be attributed to the vibrational density of states of the buffer layer.


Nano Letters | 2015

Tunable Carrier Multiplication and Cooling in Graphene

Jens Christian Johannsen; Søren Ulstrup; A. Crepaldi; Federico Cilento; M. Zacchigna; Jill A. Miwa; Cephise Cacho; Richard T. Chapman; E. Springate; Felix Fromm; Christian Raidel; Thomas Seyller; P. D. C. King; F. Parmigiani; M. Grioni; Philip Hofmann

Time- and angle-resolved photoemission measurements on two doped graphene samples displaying different doping levels reveal remarkable differences in the ultrafast dynamics of the hot carriers in the Dirac cone. In the more strongly (n-)doped graphene, we observe larger carrier multiplication factors (>3) and a significantly faster phonon-mediated cooling of the carriers back to equilibrium compared to in the less (p-)doped graphene. These results suggest that a careful tuning of the doping level allows for an effective manipulation of graphenes dynamical response to a photoexcitation.


Optics Express | 2013

Fabry-Perot enhanced Faraday rotation in graphene.

Nicolas Ubrig; Iris Crassee; Julien Levallois; Ievgeniia O. Nedoliuk; Felix Fromm; Michl Kaiser; Thomas Seyller; A. B. Kuzmenko

We demonstrate that giant Faraday rotation in graphene in the terahertz range due to the cyclotron resonance is further increased by constructive Fabry-Perot interference in the supporting substrate. Simultaneously, an enhanced total transmission is achieved, making this effect doubly advantageous for graphene-based magneto-optical applications. As an example, we present far-infrared spectra of epitaxial multilayer graphene grown on the C-face of 6H-SiC, where the interference fringes are spectrally resolved and a Faraday rotation up to 0.15 radians (9°) is attained. Further, we discuss and compare other ways to increase the Faraday rotation using the principle of an optical cavity.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2013

Electron–phonon coupling in quasi-free-standing graphene

Jens Christian Johannsen; Søren Ulstrup; Marco Bianchi; Richard C. Hatch; Dandan Guan; Federico Mazzola; Liv Hornekær; Felix Fromm; Christian Raidel; Thomas Seyller; Philip Hofmann

Quasi-free-standing monolayer graphene can be produced by intercalating species like oxygen or hydrogen between epitaxial graphene and the substrate crystal. If the graphene was indeed decoupled from the substrate, one would expect the observation of a similar electronic dispersion and many-body effects, irrespective of the substrate and the material used to achieve the decoupling. Here we investigate the electron-phonon coupling in two different types of quasi-free-standing monolayer graphene: decoupled from SiC via hydrogen intercalation and decoupled from Ir via oxygen intercalation. The two systems show similar overall behaviours of the self-energy and a weak renormalization of the bands near the Fermi energy. The electron-phonon coupling is found to be so weak that it renders the precise determination of the coupling constant λ through renormalization difficult. The estimated value of λ is 0.05(3) for both systems.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Tuning the charge carriers in epitaxial graphene on SiC(0001) from electron to hole via molecular doping with C60F48

Anton Tadich; Mark Thomas Edmonds; L. Ley; Felix Fromm; Yaou Smets; Z. Mazej; J.D. Riley; C. I. Pakes; Th. Seyller; Martina Wanke

We demonstrate that the intrinsic electron doping of monolayer epitaxial graphene on SiC(0001) can be tuned in a controlled fashion to holes via molecular doping with the fluorinated fullerene C60F48. In situ angle-resolved photoemission is used to measure an upward shift of (0.6 ± 0.05) eV in the Dirac point from −0.43 eV to +0.17 eV relative to the Fermi level. The carrier density is observed to change from n ∼ (1 × 1013 ± 0.1 × 1013) cm−2 to p ∼ (2 × 1012 ± 1 × 1012) cm−2. We introduce a doping model employing Fermi-Dirac statistics which explicitly takes temperature and the highly correlated nature of molecular orbitals into account. The model describes the observed doping behaviour in our experiment and readily explains why net p-type doping was not achieved in a previous study [Coletti et al., Phys. Rev. B 81, 8 (2010)] which used tetrafluorotetra-cyanoquinodimethane (F4-TCNQ).

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Thomas Seyller

Chemnitz University of Technology

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Christian Raidel

Chemnitz University of Technology

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Jens Christian Johannsen

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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A. Crepaldi

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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M. Grioni

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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F. Parmigiani

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Federico Cilento

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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