Full-scale Simulation of Electron Transport in Nanoporous Graphene: Probing the Talbot Effect


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Designing platforms to control phase-coherence and interference of electron waves is a cornerstone for future quantum electronics, computing or sensing. Nanoporous graphene (NPG) consisting of linked graphene nanoribbons has recently been fabricated using molecular precursors and bottom-up assembly [Moreno et al., Science 360, 199 (2018)] opening an avenue for controlling the electronic current in a two-dimensional material. By simulating electron transport in real-sized NPG samples we predict that electron waves injected from the tip of a scanning tunneling microscope (STM) behave similarly to photons in coupled waveguides, displaying a Talbot interference pattern. We link the origins of this effect to the band structure of the NPG and further demonstrate how this pattern may be mapped out by a second STM probe. We enable atomistic parameter-free calculations beyond the 100 nm scale by developing a new multi-scale method where first-principles density functional theory regions are seamlessly embedded into a large-scale tight-binding.

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