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Dive into the research topics where J. Güttinger is active.

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Featured researches published by J. Güttinger.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Energy Gaps in Etched Graphene Nanoribbons

Christoph Stampfer; J. Güttinger; S. Hellmüller; F. Molitor; Klaus Ensslin; Thomas Ihn

Transport measurements on an etched graphene nanoribbon are presented. It is shown that two distinct voltage scales can be experimentally extracted that characterize the parameter region of suppressed conductance at low charge density in the ribbon. One of them is related to the charging energy of localized states, the other to the strength of the disorder potential. The lever arms of gates vary by up to 30% for different localized states which must therefore be spread in position along the ribbon. A single-electron transistor is used to prove the addition of individual electrons to the localized states. In our sample the characteristic charging energy is of the order of 10 meV, the characteristic strength of the disorder potential of the order of 100 meV.


Applied Physics Letters | 2008

Tunable Coulomb blockade in nanostructured graphene

Christoph Stampfer; J. Güttinger; F. Molitor; D. Graf; Thomas Ihn; Klaus Ensslin

We report on Coulomb blockade and Coulomb diamond measurements on an etched, tunable single-layer graphene quantum dot. The device consisting of a graphene island connected via two narrow graphene constrictions is fully tunable by three lateral graphene gates. Coulomb blockade resonances are observed and from Coulomb diamond measurements, a charging energy of ≈3.5meV is extracted. For increasing temperatures, we detect a peak broadening and a transmission increase of the nanostructured graphene barriers.


Materials Today | 2010

Graphene single-electron transistors

Thomas Ihn; J. Güttinger; F. Molitor; S. Schnez; E. Schurtenberger; Arnhild Jacobsen; S. Hellmüller; T. Frey; S. Dröscher; Christoph Stampfer; Klaus Ensslin

Graphene, a single layer of carbon atoms forming a perfectly stable and clean two-dimensional crystal with very few defects, has been proclaimed to be a new revolutionary material for electronics. These hopes rest mainly on the unique band structure properties of graphene. Although living essentially on the surface, electron mobilities in this material do not suffer extensively from surface contaminations and are surprisingly high even at room temperature. In comparison to extremely high quality semiconducting materials, such as Silicon and GaAs, the understanding of electronic transport in graphene is still in its infancy. Research on nanoscale transistors switching with only a single electron exemplifies that there are a number of unresolved problems that material scientists should tackle in the future for making the graphene dreams come true.


Physical Review B | 2009

Transport gap in side-gated graphene constrictions

F. Molitor; Arnhild Jacobsen; Christoph Stampfer; J. Güttinger; Thomas Ihn; Klaus Ensslin

We present measurements on side-gated graphene constrictions of different geometries. We characterize the transport gap by its width in back-gate voltage and compare this to an analysis based on Coulomb blockade measurements of localized states. We study the effect of an applied side-gate voltage on the transport gap and show that high side-gate voltages lift the suppression of the conductance. Finally we study the effect of an applied magnetic field and demonstrate the presence of edge states in the constriction.


Applied Physics Letters | 2009

Observation of excited states in a graphene quantum dot

S. Schnez; F. Molitor; Christoph Stampfer; J. Güttinger; Ivan Shorubalko; Thomas Ihn; Klaus Ensslin

We demonstrate that excited states in single-layer graphene quantum dots can be detected via direct transport experiments. Coulomb diamond measurements show distinct features of sequential tunneling through an excited state. Moreover, the onset of inelastic cotunneling in the diamond region could be detected. For low magnetic fields, the positions of the single-particle energy levels fluctuate on the scale of a flux quantum penetrating the dot area. For higher magnetic fields, the transition to the formation of Landau levels is observed. Estimates based on the linear energy-momentum relation of graphene give carrier numbers of the order of 10 for our device.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2011

Electronic properties of graphene nanostructures

F. Molitor; J. Güttinger; Christoph Stampfer; S. Dröscher; Arnhild Jacobsen; Thomas Ihn; Klaus Ensslin

In this review, recent developments in the fabrication and understanding of the electronic properties of graphene nanostructures are discussed. After a brief overview of the structure of graphene and the two-dimensional transport properties, the focus is put on graphene constrictions, quantum dots and double quantum dots. For constrictions with a width below 100 nm, the current through the constriction is strongly suppressed for a certain back gate voltage range, related to the so-called transport gap. This transport gap is due to the formation of localized puddles in the constriction, and its size depends strongly on the constriction width. Such constrictions can be used to confine charge carriers in quantum dots, leading to Coulomb blockade effects.


Applied Physics Letters | 2008

Charge detection in graphene quantum dots

J. Güttinger; Christoph Stampfer; S. Hellmüller; F. Molitor; Thomas Ihn; Klaus Ensslin

We report measurements on a graphene quantum dot with an integrated graphene charge detector. The quantum dot device consists of a graphene island (diameter of ∼200 nm) connected to source and drain contacts via two narrow graphene constrictions. From Coulomb diamond measurements a charging energy of 4.3 meV is extracted. The charge detector is based on a 45 nm wide graphene nanoribbon placed approximately 60 nm from the island. We show that resonances in the nanoribbon can be used to detect individual charging events on the quantum dot. The charging induced potential change on the quantum dot causes a steplike change in the current in the charge detector. The relative change in the current ranges from 10% up to 60% for detecting individual charging events.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Spin States in Graphene Quantum Dots

J. Güttinger; T. Frey; Christoph Stampfer; Thomas Ihn; Klaus Ensslin

We investigate ground and excited state transport through small (d≈70  nm) graphene quantum dots. The successive spin filling of orbital states is detected by measuring the difference between ground-state energies as a function of a magnetic field. For a magnetic field in-plane of the quantum dot the Zeeman splitting of spin states is measured. The results are compatible with a g factor of 2, and we detect a spin-filling sequence for a series of states which is reasonable given the strength of exchange interaction effects expected by comparing Coulomb interaction energy and kinetic energy of charge carriers in graphene.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Electron-hole crossover in graphene quantum dots.

J. Güttinger; Christoph Stampfer; Florian Libisch; Tobias Frey; Joachim Burgdörfer; Thomas Ihn; Klaus Ensslin

We investigate the addition spectrum of a graphene quantum-dot in the vicinity of the electron-hole crossover as a function of perpendicular magnetic field. Coulomb-blockade resonances of the 50 nm wide dot are visible at all gate voltages across the transport gap ranging from hole to electron transport. The magnetic field dependence of more than 50 states displays the unique complex evolution of the diamagnetic spectrum of a graphene dot from the low-field regime to the Landau regime with the n=0 Landau level situated in the center of the transport gap marking the electron-hole crossover. The average peak spacing in the energy region around the crossover decreases with increasing magnetic field. In the vicinity of the charge neutrality point we observe a well resolved and rich excited state spectrum.


Nano Letters | 2014

Coupling Graphene Mechanical Resonators to Superconducting Microwave Cavities

P. Weber; J. Güttinger; I. Tsioutsios; Darrick E. Chang; Adrian Bachtold

Graphene is an attractive material for nanomechanical devices because it allows for exceptional properties, such as high frequencies, quality factors, and low mass. An outstanding challenge, however, has been to obtain large coupling between the motion and external systems for efficient readout and manipulation. Here, we report on a novel approach, in which we capacitively couple a high-Q graphene mechanical resonator (Q ≈ 10(5)) to a superconducting microwave cavity. The initial devices exhibit a large single-photon coupling of ∼10 Hz. Remarkably, we can electrostatically change the graphene equilibrium position and thereby tune the single photon coupling, the mechanical resonance frequency, and the sign and magnitude of the observed Duffing nonlinearity. The strong tunability opens up new possibilities, such as the tuning of the optomechanical coupling strength on a time scale faster than the inverse of the cavity line width. With realistic improvements, it should be possible to enter the regime of quantum optomechanics.

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Klaus Ensslin

Solid State Physics Laboratory

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Thomas Ihn

Solid State Physics Laboratory

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F. Molitor

Solid State Physics Laboratory

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S. Dröscher

Solid State Physics Laboratory

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Arnhild Jacobsen

Solid State Physics Laboratory

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S. Schnez

Solid State Physics Laboratory

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T. Frey

Solid State Physics Laboratory

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Adrian Bachtold

Spanish National Research Council

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D. Graf

Solid State Physics Laboratory

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