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Dive into the research topics where Ivan J. Vera-Marun is active.

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Featured researches published by Ivan J. Vera-Marun.


ACS Nano | 2015

Air-stable transport in graphene-contacted, fully encapsulated ultrathin black phosphorus-based field-effect transistors.

Ahmet Avsar; Ivan J. Vera-Marun; Jun You Tan; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; Antonio H. Castro Neto; Barbaros Özyilmaz

The presence of finite bandgap and high mobility in semiconductor few-layer black phosphorus offers an attractive prospect for using this material in future two-dimensional electronic devices. Here we demonstrate for the first time fully encapsulated ultrathin (down to bilayer) black phosphorus field effect transistors in Van der Waals heterostructures to preclude their stability and degradation problems which have limited their potential for applications. Introducing monolayer graphene in our device architecture for one-atom-thick conformal source-drain electrodes enables a chemically inert boron nitride dielectric to tightly seal the black phosphorus surface. This architecture, generally applicable for other sensitive two-dimensional crystals, results in stable transport characteristics which are hysteresis free and identical both under high vacuum and ambient conditions. Remarkably, our graphene electrodes lead to contacts not dominated by thermionic emission, solving the issue of Schottky barrier limited transport in the technologically relevant two-terminal field effect transistor geometry.The presence of direct bandgap and high mobility in semiconductor few-layer black phosphorus offers an attractive prospect for using this material in future two-dimensional electronic devices. However, creation of barrier-free contacts which is necessary to achieve high performance in black phosphorus-based devices is challenging and currently limits their potential for applications. Here, we characterize fully encapsulated ultrathin (down to bilayer) black phosphorus field effect transistors fabricated under inert gas conditions by utilizing graphene as source-drain electrodes and boron nitride as an encapsulation layer. The observation of a linear ISD-VSD behavior with negligible temperature dependence shows that graphene electrodes lead to barrier-free contacts, solving the issue of Schottky barrier limited transport in the technologically relevant two-terminal field-effect transistor geometry. Such one-atom-thick conformal source-drain electrodes also enable the black phosphorus surface to be sealed, to avoid rapid degradation, with the inert boron nitride encapsulating layer. This architecture, generally applicable for other sensitive two-dimensional crystals, results in air-stable, hysteresis-free transport characteristics.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2011

Relating hysteresis and electrochemistry in graphene field effect transistors

A. Veligura; P. J. Zomer; Ivan J. Vera-Marun; C. Jozsa; Pavlo I. Gordiichuk; Bart J. van Wees

Hysteresis and commonly observed p-doping of graphene based field effect transistors (FETs) have been discussed in reports over the last few years. However, the interpretation of experimental works differs; and the mechanism behind the appearance of the hysteresis and the role of charge transfer between graphene and its environment is not clarified yet. We analyze the relation between electrochemical and electronic properties of graphene FETs in a moist environment extracted from the standard back gate dependence of the graphene resistance. We argue that graphene based FETs on a regular SiO2 substrate exhibit behavior that corresponds to electrochemically induced hysteresis in ambient conditions, and can be caused by a charge trapping mechanism associated with sensitivity of graphene to the local pH.


Nature Communications | 2017

Edge currents shunt the insulating bulk in gapped graphene

Mengjian Zhu; Andrey V. Kretinin; Michael Thompson; Denis A. Bandurin; S. Hu; Geliang Yu; John Birkbeck; Artem Mishchenko; Ivan J. Vera-Marun; Kenji Watanabe; T. Taniguchi; Marco Polini; Jonathan Prance; K. S. Novoselov; A. K. Geim; M. Ben Shalom

An energy gap can be opened in the spectrum of graphene reaching values as large as 0.2 eV in the case of bilayers. However, such gaps rarely lead to the highly insulating state expected at low temperatures. This long-standing puzzle is usually explained by charge inhomogeneity. Here we revisit the issue by investigating proximity-induced superconductivity in gapped graphene and comparing normal-state measurements in the Hall bar and Corbino geometries. We find that the supercurrent at the charge neutrality point in gapped graphene propagates along narrow channels near the edges. This observation is corroborated by using the edgeless Corbino geometry in which case resistivity at the neutrality point increases exponentially with increasing the gap, as expected for an ordinary semiconductor. In contrast, resistivity in the Hall bar geometry saturates to values of about a few resistance quanta. We attribute the metallic-like edge conductance to a nontrivial topology of gapped Dirac spectra.


Npg Asia Materials | 2016

Electronic spin transport in dual-gated bilayer graphene

Ahmet Avsar; Ivan J. Vera-Marun; Jun You Tan; Gavin Kok Wai Koon; Kenji Watanabe; Takashi Taniguchi; Shaffique Adam; Barbaros Özyilmaz

The elimination of extrinsic sources of spin relaxation is key in realizing the exceptional intrinsic spin transport performance of graphene. Towards this, we study charge and spin transport in bilayer graphene-based spin valve devices fabricated in a new device architecture which allows us to make a comparative study by separately investigating the roles of substrate and polymer residues on spin relaxation. First, the comparison between spin valves fabricated on SiO2 and BN substrates suggests that substrate-related charged impurities, phonons and roughness do not limit the spin transport in current devices. Next, the observation of a 5-fold enhancement in spin relaxation time in the encapsulated device highlights the significance of polymer residues on spin relaxation. We observe a spin relaxation length of ~ 10 um in the encapsulated bilayer with a charge mobility of 24000 cm2/Vs. The carrier density dependence of spin relaxation time has two distinct regimes; n 4 x 1012 cm-2, where spin relaxation time exhibits a sudden increase. The sudden increase in the spin relaxation time with no corresponding signature in the charge transport suggests the presence of a magnetic resonance close to the charge neutrality point. We also demonstrate, for the first time, spin transport across bipolar p-n junctions in our dual-gated device architecture that fully integrates a sequence of encapsulated regions in its design. At low temperatures, strong suppression of the spin signal was observed while a transport gap was induced, which is interpreted as a novel manifestation of impedance mismatch within the spin channel.


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2017

Magnetoresistance of vertical Co-graphene-NiFe junctions controlled by charge transfer and proximity-induced spin splitting in graphene

P U Asshoff; Jose L. Sambricio; Aidan P. Rooney; S Slizovskiy; Artem Mishchenko; Alexander M. Rakowski; E. W. Hill; A. K. Geim; Sarah J. Haigh; V. I. Fal’ko; Ivan J. Vera-Marun; I. V. Grigorieva

Graphene is hailed as an ideal material for spintronics due to weak intrinsic spin-orbit interaction that facilitates lateral spin transport and tunability of its electronic properties, including a possibility to induce magnetism in graphene. Another promising application of graphene is related to its use as a spacer separating ferromagnetic metals (FMs) in vertical magnetoresistive devices, the most prominent class of spintronic devices widely used as magnetic sensors. In particular, few-layer graphene was predicted to act as a perfect spin filter. Here we show that the role of graphene in such devices (at least in the absence of epitaxial alignment between graphene and the FMs) is different and determined by proximity-induced spin splitting and charge transfer with adjacent ferromagnetic metals, making graphene a weak FM electrode rather than a spin filter. To this end, we report observations of magnetoresistance (MR) in vertical Co-graphene-NiFe junctions with 1 to 4 graphene layers separating the ferromagnets, and demonstrate that the dependence of the MR sign on the number of layers and its inversion at relatively small bias voltages is consistent with spin transport between weakly doped and differently spin-polarized layers of graphene. The proposed interpretation is supported by the observation of an MR sign reversal in biased Co-graphene-hBN-NiFe devices and by comprehensive structural characterization. Our results suggest a new architecture for vertical devices with electrically controlled MR.


Physical Review B | 2012

Field-induced quantum hall ferromagnetism in suspended bilayer graphene

H. J. van Elferen; A. Veligura; E. V. Kurganova; U. Zeitler; J. C. Maan; N. Tombros; Ivan J. Vera-Marun; van Bart Wees

We have measured the magnetoresistance of freely suspended high-mobility bilayer graphene. For magnetic fields B > 1 T we observe the opening of a field-induced gap at the charge neutrality point characterized by a diverging resistance. For higher fields the eightfold degenerated lowest Landau level lifts completely. Both the sequence of this symmetry breaking and the strong transition of the gap-size point to a ferromagnetic nature of the insulating phase developing at the charge neutrality point.


Nature Communications | 2016

Direct electronic measurement of Peltier cooling and heating in graphene

Ivan J. Vera-Marun; J. J. van den Berg; F. K. Dejene; B. J. van Wees

Thermoelectric effects allow the generation of electrical power from waste heat and the electrical control of cooling and heating. Remarkably, these effects are also highly sensitive to the asymmetry in the density of states around the Fermi energy and can therefore be exploited as probes of distortions in the electronic structure at the nanoscale. Here we consider two-dimensional graphene as an excellent nanoscale carbon material for exploring the interaction between electronic and thermal transport phenomena, by presenting a direct and quantitative measurement of the Peltier component to electronic cooling and heating in graphene. Thanks to an architecture including nanoscale thermometers, we detected Peltier component modulation of up to 15 mK for currents of 20 μA at room temperature and observed a full reversal between Peltier cooling and heating for electron and hole regimes. This fundamental thermodynamic property is a complementary tool for the study of nanoscale thermoelectric transport in two-dimensional materials.


Physical Review B | 2017

Spin Injection and Detection via the Anomalous Spin Hall Effect of a Ferromagnetic Metal

Kumar Sourav Das; B. J. Schoemaker; B. J. van Wees; Ivan J. Vera-Marun

We report a spin injection and detection mechanism via the anomalous Hall effect in a ferromagnetic metal. The anomalous spin Hall effect (ASHE) refers to the transverse spin current generated within the ferromagnet. We utilize the ASHE and its reciprocal effect to electrically inject and detect magnons in amagnetic insulator (yttrium iron garnet) in a nonlocal geometry. Our experiments reveal that permalloy has a comparable spin injection and detection efficiency to that of platinum, owing to the ASHE. We also demonstrate the tunability of the ASHE via the orientation of the permalloy magnetization, thus creating possibilities for spintronic applications.


Physical Review B | 2017

Spin relaxation 1/f noise in graphene

S. Omar; M. H. D. Guimarães; Alexey Kaverzin; B. J. van Wees; Ivan J. Vera-Marun

We report the first measurement of 1/f type noise associated with electronic spin transport, using single layer graphene as a prototypical material with a large and tunable Hooge parameter. We identify the presence of two contributions to the measured spin-dependent noise: contact polarization noise from the ferromagnetic electrodes, which can be filtered out using the cross-correlation method, and the noise originated from the spin relaxation processes. The noise magnitude for spin and charge transport differs by three orders of magnitude, implying different scattering mechanisms for the 1/f fluctuations in the charge and spin transport processes. A modulation of the spin-dependent noise magnitude by changing the spin relaxation length and time indicates that the spin-flip processes dominate the spin-dependent noise.


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2018

Magnon-assisted tunnelling in van der Waals heterostructures based on CrBr3

Davit Ghazaryan; Mark T. Greenaway; Zihao Wang; Víctor H. Guarochico-Moreira; Ivan J. Vera-Marun; Jun Yin; Yuanxun Liao; S.V. Morozov; Oleg Kristanovski; A. I. Lichtenstein; M. I. Katsnelson; Fred Withers; Artem Mishchenko; L. Eaves; A. K. Geim; K. S. Novoselov; Abhishek Misra

Van der Waals heterostructures, which are composed of layered two-dimensional materials, offer a platform to investigate a diverse range of physical phenomena and could be of use in a variety of applications. Heterostructures containing two-dimensional ferromagnets, such as chromium triiodide (CrI3), have recently been reported, which could allow two-dimensional spintronic devices to be developed. Here we study tunnelling through thin ferromagnetic chromium tribromide (CrBr3) barriers that are sandwiched between graphene electrodes. In devices with non-magnetic barriers, conservation of momentum can be relaxed by phonon-assisted tunnelling or by tunnelling through localized states. In contrast, in the devices with ferromagnetic barriers, the major tunnelling mechanisms are the emission of magnons at low temperatures and the scattering of electrons on localized magnetic excitations at temperatures above the Curie temperature. Magnetoresistance in the graphene electrodes further suggests induced spin–orbit coupling and proximity exchange via the ferromagnetic barrier. Tunnelling with magnon emission offers the possibility of spin injection.Electrons can tunnel through thin ferromagnetic CrBr3 barriers, sandwiched between graphene electrodes, via the emission of magnons, which suggests that these magnetic tunnel barriers could be used for spin injection.

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Kenji Watanabe

National Institute for Materials Science

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A. K. Geim

University of Manchester

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Takashi Taniguchi

National Institute for Materials Science

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A. Veligura

University of Groningen

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Ahmet Avsar

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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