In publica commoda

Press release: Discovery unlocks potential of “miracle material” for future electronics

No. 135 - 05.09.2025

Research team observes Floquet effects in graphene paving the way for innovative technology

 

Graphene is an extraordinary material – a sheet of interlocking carbon atoms just one atom thick that is stable and extremely conductive. This makes it useful in a range of areas, such as flexible electronic displays, highly precise sensors, powerful batteries, and efficient solar cells. A new study – led by the University of Göttingen, working together with colleagues from Braunschweig and Bremen in Germany, and Fribourg in Switzerland – now takes graphene’s potential to a whole new level. Researchers have directly observed “Floquet effects” in graphene for the first time. This resolves a long-standing debate: Floquet engineering – a method in which the properties of a material are very precisely altered using pulses of light – also works in metallic and semi-metallic quantum materials such as graphene. The study was published in Nature Physics.

 

The researchers used femtosecond momentum microscopy to experimentally investigate Floquet states in graphene. In this technique, the samples are first excited with rapid flashes of light and then examined with a delayed light pulse in order to track dynamic processes in the material. “Our measurements clearly prove that ‘Floquet effects’ occur in the photoemission spectrum of graphene,” explains Dr Marco Merboldt, physicist at the University of Göttingen and first author of the study. “This makes it clear that Floquet engineering actually works in these systems – and the potential of this discovery is huge.” The study shows that Floquet engineering works in many materials. This means the goal of designing quantum materials with specific properties – and doing so with laser pulses in an extremely short time – is getting closer.

 

Tailoring materials in this way for specific applications could form the basis for the electronics, computer, and sensor technology of the future. Professor Marcel Reutzel, who led the research in Göttingen together with Professor Stefan Mathias, says: "Our results open up new ways of controlling electronic states in quantum materials with light. This could lead to technologies in which electrons are manipulated in a targeted and controlled manner.” Reutzel adds: “What is particularly exciting is that this also enables us to investigate topological properties. These are special, very stable properties which have great potential for developing reliable quantum computers or new sensors for the future."

 

This research was made possible by the German Research Foundation (DFG) via Göttingen University’s Collaborative Research Centre “Control of Energy Conversion at Atomic Scales”.

 

Original publication: Marco Merboldt et al. Observation of Floquet states in graphene. Nature Physics (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41567-025-02889-7

 

The publication was highlighted in a “News & Views” article in Nature Physics, in which independent experts assess and classify the study: “Floquet states in graphene revealed at last”. DOI: 10.1038/s41567-025-02939-0

 

Contact:

Professor Stefan Mathias

University of Göttingen

Faculty of Physics

Ultrafast Dynamics in Quantum Materials

Friedrich Hund Platz 1, 37077 Göttingen, Germany

Tel: +49 (0)551 39-27601

Email: smathias@uni-goettingen.de

www.mathiaslab.uni-goettingen.de