2018
DOI: 10.1103/physrevb.97.125403
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Lifshitz transition and thermoelectric properties of bilayer graphene

Abstract: This is a numerical study of thermoelectric properties of ballistic bilayer graphene in the presence of trigonal warping term in the effective Hamiltonian. We find, in the mesoscopic samples of the length L > 10 µm at sub-Kelvin temperatures, that both the Seebeck coefficient and the Lorentz number show anomalies (the additional maximum and minimum, respectively) when the electrochemical potential is close to the Lifshitz energy, which can be attributed to the presence of the van Hove singularity in a bulk den… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…A logarithmic deviation of the maximal absolute thermopower from the Goldsmid-Sharp relation is identified and rationalized with the help of the step-function model for the transmission-energy dependence. In addition to the earlier findings that the trigonal warping term modifies the density of states [24] and transport properties [13] also for Fermi energies 1 meV, we show here that signatures of trigonal warping may still be visible in thermoelectric characteristics for the band gaps as large as ∆ ∼ 100 meV.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A logarithmic deviation of the maximal absolute thermopower from the Goldsmid-Sharp relation is identified and rationalized with the help of the step-function model for the transmission-energy dependence. In addition to the earlier findings that the trigonal warping term modifies the density of states [24] and transport properties [13] also for Fermi energies 1 meV, we show here that signatures of trigonal warping may still be visible in thermoelectric characteristics for the band gaps as large as ∆ ∼ 100 meV.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…1(b) oscillations of the Fabry-Pérot type are well-pronounces, see Ref. [13]. In contrast, the Seebeck coefficient is almost identical for both systems, see Fig.…”
Section: Numerical Resultssupporting
confidence: 59%
“…[13], with a numerical stabilization introduced in Ref. [28]. In brief, at finite-precision arithmetics, the modematching equations may become ill defined for sufficiently large L, as they contain both exponentially growing and exponentially decaying coefficients.…”
Section: A Zero-temperature Charge Transportmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…where m = γ 1 /2v 2 0 and k l = γ 1 v 3 / v 2 0 , leading to a nonzero number of propagating modes (open channels) at zero energy, which can be approximated as [28]…”
Section: A Zero-temperature Charge Transportmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the dominant contribution to the thermal conductivity originates from lattice vibrations (phonons), particularly these corresponding to out-of-plane deformations [ 3 , 4 ] allowing graphene to outperform more rigid carbon nanotubes, the electronic contribution to the thermal conductivity ( ) was also found to be surprisingly high [ 5 ] in relation to the electrical conductivity ( ) close to the charge-neutrality point [ 6 ]. One can show theoretically that the electronic contribution dominates the thermal transport at sub-kelvin temperatures [ 7 ], but direct comparison with the experiment is currently missing. Starting from a few kelvins, up to the temperatures of about K, it is possible to control the temperatures of electrons and lattice independently [ 5 ], since the electron–phonon coupling is weak, and to obtain the value of directly.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%