Event
Special Condensed Matter Seminar: "Nano-electrodynamics with graphene plasmons"
Mark Lundeberg, Institute of Photonic Sciences (Castelldefels, Spain).
I will review my
recent work on plasmons in graphene, a naturally appropriate material for
studying electron motion at terahertz and mid-infrared frequencies. Graphene
plasmons are extremely confined propagating waves (with wavelengths 100 times
smaller than light) which have lifetimes up to 500 fs at room temperature, and
which can be probed by near field microscopy. Various aspects of these plasmons
will be discussed: in-situ tuning and guiding with gate voltages, electrical
detection of plasmons, and tuning by the dielectric environment around the
graphene. Most recently, we have brought graphene plasmons to a regime where
non-trivial electronic physics becomes relevant (quantum effects in
non-locality / spatial dispersion). Along these lines, this talk will highlight
the future prospects of near field techniques to provide a unique window on the
electronic phases and correlations in other semi-metallic and semi-insulating
materials.