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  5. Fine Structure Constant Defines Visual Transparency of Graphene

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Article
English
2008

Fine Structure Constant Defines Visual Transparency of Graphene

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English
2008
Science
Vol 320 (5881)
DOI: 10.1126/science.1156965

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Konstantin ‘kostya’  Novoselov
Konstantin ‘kostya’ Novoselov

The University of Manchester

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Rahul R. Nair
Peter Blake
A. N. Grigorenko
+5 more

Abstract

There are few phenomena in condensed matter physics that are defined only by the fundamental constants and do not depend on material parameters. Examples are the resistivity quantum, h/e2 (h is Planck's constant and e the electron charge), that appears in a variety of transport experiments and the magnetic flux quantum, h/e, playing an important role in the physics of superconductivity. By and large, sophisticated facilities and special measurement conditions are required to observe any of these phenomena. We show that the opacity of suspended graphene is defined solely by the fine structure constant, a = e2/hc � 1/137 (where c is the speed of light), the parameter that describes coupling between light and relativistic electrons and that is traditionally associated with quantum electrodynamics rather than materials science. Despite being only one atom thick, graphene is found to absorb a significant (pa = 2.3%) fraction of incident white light, a consequence of graphene's unique electronic structure.

How to cite this publication

Rahul R. Nair, Peter Blake, A. N. Grigorenko, Konstantin ‘kostya’ Novoselov, Timothy J. Booth, Tobias Stauber, N. M. R. Peres, A. K. Geǐm (2008). Fine Structure Constant Defines Visual Transparency of Graphene. Science, 320(5881), pp. 1308-1308, DOI: 10.1126/science.1156965.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2008

Authors

8

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

Science

DOI

10.1126/science.1156965

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