Prof. Pablo Jarillo-Herrero

Cecil and Ida Green Professor of Physics

Areas of Interest and Expertise

Condensed Matter
Quantum Electronic Transport in Novel Low-Dimensional Systems such as Graphene and Carbon Nanotubes
Crystallographic Graphene Nanoribbons
Superconducting Graphene Nanoelectronic Devices
Suspended Graphene Devices
Graphene-Carbon Nanotube Junctions
Gated Bilayer Graphene

Research Summary

Professor Jarillo's research interests lie in the area of experimental condensed matter physics, in particular quantum electronic transport in novel low dimensional nanomaterials, such as graphene and carbon nanotubes. Graphene and carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are the 2- and 1-dimensional forms of graphite, respectively, and constitute ideal 2D and 1D systems to study the behavior of electrons in low dimensions. Since their discovery (~1993 for single wall CNTs and ~2004 for graphene) these materials have fascinated physicists, chemists, engineers and even biologists because of their amazing properties. Jarillo's group focuses on understanding the novel electronic properties of these materials stemming from their unique electronic structure. On the fundamental side, electrons in graphene, for example, behave in many ways similar to "charged neutrinos". On a more "technological" side, the spin dynamics of confined electrons in CNTs and graphene is expected to be very rich, and enables many basic experiments in the area of spintronics and quantum information processing.

Recent Work