Mikko M. Ervasti
Aalto University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mikko M. Ervasti.
Nature Communications | 2015
Amina Kimouche; Mikko M. Ervasti; Robert Drost; Simo Halonen; Ari Harju; Pekka Joensuu; Jani Sainio; Peter Liljeroth
Graphene nanoribbons (GNRs)—narrow stripes of graphene—have emerged as promising building blocks for nanoelectronic devices. Recent advances in bottom-up synthesis have allowed production of atomically well-defined armchair GNRs with different widths and doping. While all experimentally studied GNRs have exhibited wide bandgaps, theory predicts that every third armchair GNR (widths of N=3m+2, where m is an integer) should be nearly metallic with a very small bandgap. Here, we synthesize the narrowest possible GNR belonging to this family (five carbon atoms wide, N=5). We study the evolution of the electronic bandgap and orbital structure of GNR segments as a function of their length using low-temperature scanning tunnelling microscopy and density-functional theory calculations. Already GNRs with lengths of 5 nm reach almost metallic behaviour with ∼100 meV bandgap. Finally, we show that defects (kinks) in the GNRs do not strongly modify their electronic structure.
Nature Communications | 2013
J. van der Lit; Mark P. Boneschanscher; Daniel Vanmaekelbergh; M. Ijäs; Christer Uppstu; Mikko M. Ervasti; Ari Harju; Peter Liljeroth; Ingmar Swart
Graphene nanostructures, where quantum confinement opens an energy gap in the band structure, hold promise for future electronic devices. To realize the full potential of these materials, atomic-scale control over the contacts to graphene and the graphene nanostructure forming the active part of the device is required. The contacts should have a high transmission and yet not modify the electronic properties of the active region significantly to maintain the potentially exciting physics offered by the nanoscale honeycomb lattice. Here we show how contacting an atomically well-defined graphene nanoribbon to a metallic lead by a chemical bond via only one atom significantly influences the charge transport through the graphene nanoribbon but does not affect its electronic structure. Specifically, we find that creating well-defined contacts can suppress inelastic transport channels.
Nano Letters | 2014
Robert Drost; Andreas Uppstu; Fabian Schulz; Sampsa K. Hämäläinen; Mikko M. Ervasti; Ari Harju; Peter Liljeroth
The electronic properties of graphene edges have been predicted to depend on their crystallographic orientation. The so-called zigzag (ZZ) edges haven been extensively explored theoretically and proposed for various electronic applications. However, their experimental study remains challenging due to the difficulty in realizing clean ZZ edges without disorder, reconstructions, or the presence of chemical functional groups. Here, we propose the ZZ-terminated, atomically sharp interfaces between graphene and hexagonal boron nitride (BN) as experimentally realizable, chemically stable model systems for graphene ZZ edges. Combining scanning tunneling microscopy and numerical methods, we explore the structure of graphene-BN interfaces and show them to host localized electronic states similar to those on the pristine graphene ZZ edge.
Physical Review B | 2013
M. Ijäs; Mikko M. Ervasti; Christer Uppstu; Peter Liljeroth; J. van der Lit; Ingmar Swart; Ari Harju
We study the electronic structure of finite armchair graphene nanoribbons using density-functional theory and the Hubbard model, concentrating on the states localized at the zigzag termini. We show that the energy gaps between end-localized states are sensitive to doping, and that in doped systems, the gap between the end-localized states decreases exponentially as a function of the ribbon length. Doping also quenches the antiferromagnetic coupling between the end-localized states leading to a spin-split gap in neutral ribbons. By comparing
Physical Review B | 2017
Zheyong Fan; Luiz Felipe C. Pereira; Petri Hirvonen; Mikko M. Ervasti; Ken Elder; Davide Donadio; Tapio Ala-Nissila; Ari Harju
dI/dV
Physical Review B | 2016
Petri Hirvonen; Mikko M. Ervasti; Zheyong Fan; Morteza Jalalvand; Matthew Seymour; S. Mehdi Vaez Allaei; Nikolas Provatas; Ari Harju; Ken Elder; Tapio Ala-Nissila
maps calculated using the many-body Hubbard model, its mean-field approximation and density-functional theory, we show that the use of a single-particle description is justified for graphene
Nature Communications | 2017
Peter H. Jacobse; A. Kimouche; T. Gebraad; Mikko M. Ervasti; J. M. Thijssen; Peter Liljeroth; Ingmar Swart
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Physical Review B | 2015
Mikko M. Ervasti; Zheyong Fan; Andreas Uppstu; Arkady V. Krasheninnikov; Ari Harju
states in case spin properties are not the main interest. Furthermore, we study the effect of structural defects in the ribbons on their electronic structure. Defects at one ribbon terminus do not significantly modify the electronic states localized at the intact end. This provides further evidence for the interpretation of a multipeak structure in a recent scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) experiment resulting from inelastic tunneling processes [van der Lit et al., Nat. Commun. 4, 2023 (2013)]. Finally, we show that the hydrogen termination at the flake edges leaves identifiable fingerprints on the positive bias side of STS measurements, thus possibly aiding the experimental identification of graphene structures.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Robert Drost; Kezilebieke Shawulienu; Mikko M. Ervasti; Sampsa K. Hämäläinen; Fabian Schulz; Ari Harju; Peter Liljeroth
Two-dimensional materials have unusual phonon spectra due to the presence of flexural (out-of-plane) modes. Although molecular dynamics simulations have been extensively used to study heat transport in such materials, conventional formalisms treat the phonon dynamics isotropically. Here, we decompose the microscopic heat current in atomistic simulations into in-plane and out-of-plane components, corresponding to in-plane and out-of-plane phonon dynamics, respectively. This decomposition allows for direct computation of the corresponding thermal conductivity components in two-dimensional materials. We apply this decomposition to study heat transport in suspended graphene, using both equilibrium and nonequilibrium molecular dynamics simulations. We show that the flexural component is responsible for about two-thirds of the total thermal conductivity in unstrained graphene, and the acoustic flexural component is responsible for the logarithmic divergence of the conductivity when a sufficiently large tensile strain is applied.
Nano Letters | 2017
Zheyong Fan; Petri Hirvonen; Luiz Felipe C. Pereira; Mikko M. Ervasti; Ken Elder; Davide Donadio; Ari Harju; Tapio Ala-Nissila
© 2016 American Physical Society. We extend the phase field crystal (PFC) framework to quantitative modeling of polycrystalline graphene. PFC modeling is a powerful multiscale method for finding the ground state configurations of large realistic samples that can be further used to study their mechanical, thermal, or electronic properties. By fitting to quantum-mechanical density functional theory (DFT) calculations, we show that the PFC approach is able to predict realistic formation energies and defect structures of grain boundaries. We provide an in-depth comparison of the formation energies between PFC, DFT, and molecular dynamics (MD) calculations. The DFT and MD calculations are initialized using atomic configurations extracted from PFC ground states. Finally, we use the PFC approach to explicitly construct large realistic polycrystalline samples and characterize their properties using MD relaxation to demonstrate their quality.