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Dive into the research topics where Warren Mar is active.

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Featured researches published by Warren Mar.


Nature | 2012

Designer Dirac fermions and topological phases in molecular graphene.

Kenjiro K. Gomes; Warren Mar; Wonhee Ko; F. Guinea; Hari C. Manoharan

The observation of massless Dirac fermions in monolayer graphene has generated a new area of science and technology seeking to harness charge carriers that behave relativistically within solid-state materials. Both massless and massive Dirac fermions have been studied and proposed in a growing class of Dirac materials that includes bilayer graphene, surface states of topological insulators and iron-based high-temperature superconductors. Because the accessibility of this physics is predicated on the synthesis of new materials, the quest for Dirac quasi-particles has expanded to artificial systems such as lattices comprising ultracold atoms. Here we report the emergence of Dirac fermions in a fully tunable condensed-matter system—molecular graphene—assembled by atomic manipulation of carbon monoxide molecules over a conventional two-dimensional electron system at a copper surface. Using low-temperature scanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy, we embed the symmetries underlying the two-dimensional Dirac equation into electron lattices, and then visualize and shape the resulting ground states. These experiments show the existence within the system of linearly dispersing, massless quasi-particles accompanied by a density of states characteristic of graphene. We then tune the quantum tunnelling between lattice sites locally to adjust the phase accrual of propagating electrons. Spatial texturing of lattice distortions produces atomically sharp p–n and p–n–p junction devices with two-dimensional control of Dirac fermion density and the power to endow Dirac particles with mass. Moreover, we apply scalar and vector potentials locally and globally to engender topologically distinct ground states and, ultimately, embedded gauge fields, wherein Dirac electrons react to ‘pseudo’ electric and magnetic fields present in their reference frame but absent from the laboratory frame. We demonstrate that Landau levels created by these gauge fields can be taken to the relativistic magnetic quantum limit, which has so far been inaccessible in natural graphene. Molecular graphene provides a versatile means of synthesizing exotic topological electronic phases in condensed matter using tailored nanostructures.


Nature Communications | 2014

Unconventional molecule-resolved current rectification in diamondoid–fullerene hybrids

Jason C. Randel; Francis Niestemski; Andrés R. Botello-Méndez; Warren Mar; Georges Ndabashimiye; Sorin Melinte; Jeremy E. Dahl; Robert M. Carlson; Ekaterina D. Butova; Andrey A. Fokin; Peter R. Schreiner; Jean-Christophe Charlier; Hari C. Manoharan

The unimolecular rectifier is a fundamental building block of molecular electronics. Rectification in single molecules can arise from electron transfer between molecular orbitals displaying asymmetric spatial charge distributions, akin to p–n junction diodes in semiconductors. Here we report a novel all-hydrocarbon molecular rectifier consisting of a diamantane–C60 conjugate. By linking both sp3 (diamondoid) and sp2 (fullerene) carbon allotropes, this hybrid molecule opposingly pairs negative and positive electron affinities. The single-molecule conductances of self-assembled domains on Au(111), probed by low-temperature scanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy, reveal a large rectifying response of the molecular constructs. This specific electronic behaviour is postulated to originate from the electrostatic repulsion of diamantane–C60 molecules due to positively charged terminal hydrogen atoms on the diamondoid interacting with the top electrode (scanning tip) at various bias voltages. Density functional theory computations scrutinize the electronic and vibrational spectroscopic fingerprints of this unique molecular structure and corroborate the unconventional rectification mechanism.


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2009

Quantum Imaging of Topologically Unpaired Spin-Polarized Dirac Fermions

Kenjiro K. Gomes; Wonhee Ko; Warren Mar; Yulin Chen; Zhi-Xun Shen; Hari C. Manoharan


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016

Isotope-Resolved and Charge-Sensitive Force Imaging Using Scanned Single Molecules

Yan Sun; Dominik Rastawicki; Yang Liu; Warren Mar; Hari C. Manoharan; Anna Miglio; Sorin Melinte; Jean-Christophe Charlier; Gian-Marco Rignanese; Lianhua He; Fang Liu; Aihui Zhou


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014

Momentum-Space Imaging of the Dirac Band Structure in Molecular Graphene via Quasiparticle Interference

Anna Stephenson; Kenjiro K. Gomes; Wonhee Ko; Warren Mar; Hari C. Manoharan


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012

Measuring Electronic Properties of Topological Defects in Molecular Graphene

Charlie Camp; Dominik Rastawicki; Kenjiro K. Gomes; Wonhee Ko; Warren Mar; Ming Rue D. Thian; Francis Niestemski; Alex W. Contryman; Carolina Gonzalez; Hari C. Manoharan


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012

Synthesizing and Observing Electric and Magnetic Gauge Fields in Molecular Graphene

Dominik Rastawicki; Charlie Camp; Kenjiro K. Gomes; Ming Rue D. Thian; Alex W. Contryman; Hari C. Manoharan; Wonhee Ko; Warren Mar


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012

Topologically protected chiral edge state realized on molecular graphene

Wonhee Ko; Warren Mar; Kenjiro K. Gomes; Dominik Rastawicki; Charlie Camp; Hari C. Manoharan


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2011

Topological properties of artificial graphene assembled by atom manipulation

Wonhee Ko; Warren Mar; Kenjiro K. Gomes; Hari C. Manoharan


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2011

Dirac Fermions in Nanoassembled Artificial Graphene

Kenjiro K. Gomes; Wonhee Ko; Warren Mar; Hari C. Manoharan

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Zhi-Xun Shen

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Jean-Christophe Charlier

Université catholique de Louvain

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Andrés R. Botello-Méndez

Université catholique de Louvain

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