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1 SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME MONDAY, 22 JUNE 2015 07.30 - 17.00 THE REGISTRATION / HELPDESK IS OPEN, the Drum 08.30 - 09.15 OPENING CEREMONY, Theatre B 08:00 - 18:30 EXHIBITION SESSION ONE, the Drum 09.15 - 12.30 PLENARY SESSION, Theatre B 12.30 - 14.00 LUNCH, Eats Restaurant 12.30 - 18.30 GRAPHENE CONNECT INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES (pre-registration required), National Graphene Institute 13.00 - 14.00 FRINGE SESSION - GRAPHENE FOCUS BY THE GRAPHENE FLAGSHIP, Theatre A 14.00 - 17.20 PARALLEL SESSIONS ONE & TWO (Contributed Orals) 17.30 - 19.30 POSTER SESSION - SPONSORED BY TEXAS INSTRUMENTS, the Drum 20.00 - 21.30 WELCOME RECEPTION AT MANCHESTER TOWN HALL PLENARY SESSION, THEATRE B 09.15 - 09.50 Philip Kim Physics near the charge neutrality of graphene 09.50 - 10.25 Shu-Jen Han Nanoelectronics based on low-dimensional carbon materials 10.25 - 10.45 COFFEE BREAK- SPONSORED BY PLANARTECH 10.45 - 11.20 Rodney S. Ruoff Graphene and new carbon materials 11.20 - 11. 55 Wolfgang Templ How Graphene is addressing the challenges of future telecommunications 11.55 - 12.30 Kostya S. Novoselov Heterostructures based on 2D atomic crystals FRINGE SESSION, THEATRE A 13.00 - 14.00 Graphene Focus Panel discussion by the Graphene Flagship PARALLEL SESSIONS ONE & TWO Parallel Session 1: Fundamentals - Theatre B 14.00 - 14.20 Dong-Keun Ki, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland

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Page 1: SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME MONDAY 22 JUNE 2015graphene-flagship.eu/SiteCollectionDocuments/Graphene... · 2015-08-19 · Electron transport in graphene with one-dimensional local strain

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SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME – MONDAY, 22 JUNE 2015 07.30 - 17.00 THE REGISTRATION / HELPDESK IS OPEN, the Drum 08.30 - 09.15 OPENING CEREMONY, Theatre B 08:00 - 18:30 EXHIBITION SESSION ONE, the Drum 09.15 - 12.30 PLENARY SESSION, Theatre B 12.30 - 14.00 LUNCH, Eats Restaurant 12.30 - 18.30 GRAPHENE CONNECT INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES (pre-registration required),

National Graphene Institute 13.00 - 14.00 FRINGE SESSION - GRAPHENE FOCUS BY THE GRAPHENE FLAGSHIP, Theatre A 14.00 - 17.20 PARALLEL SESSIONS ONE & TWO (Contributed Orals) 17.30 - 19.30 POSTER SESSION - SPONSORED BY TEXAS INSTRUMENTS, the Drum 20.00 - 21.30 WELCOME RECEPTION AT MANCHESTER TOWN HALL

PLENARY SESSION, THEATRE B

09.15 - 09.50 Philip Kim Physics near the charge neutrality of graphene 09.50 - 10.25 Shu-Jen Han Nanoelectronics based on low-dimensional carbon materials 10.25 - 10.45 COFFEE BREAK- SPONSORED BY PLANARTECH 10.45 - 11.20 Rodney S. Ruoff Graphene and new carbon materials 11.20 - 11. 55 Wolfgang Templ How Graphene is addressing the challenges of future telecommunications 11.55 - 12.30 Kostya S. Novoselov Heterostructures based on 2D atomic crystals FRINGE SESSION, THEATRE A

13.00 - 14.00 Graphene Focus Panel discussion by the Graphene Flagship PARALLEL SESSIONS ONE & TWO

Parallel Session 1: Fundamentals - Theatre B 14.00 - 14.20 Dong-Keun Ki, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland

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Even-odd effect of interactions in Bernal-stacked graphene multilayers 14.20 - 14.40 Satoru Masubuchi, University of Tokyo, Japan Quantum hall effect in a slightly twisted bilayer graphene 14.40 - 15.00 Petr Stepanov, University of California, Riverside, US Quantum hall effect in ABA-stacked trilayer graphene 15.00 – 15.20 COFFEE BREAK - SPONSORED BY PLANARTECH 15.20 - 15.40 Artem Mishchenko, University of Manchester, UK Valley currents, pseudospin and chirality in Dirac systems 15.40 - 16.00 Pertti Hakonen, Aalto University, Finland Electron-phonon coupling in suspended mono- and bilayer graphene 16.00 - 16.20 Leonardo Vicarelli, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands In-situ electrical measurements of graphene nanoribbons fabricated through scanning transmission electron microscopy 16.20 - 16.40 Jonathan Eroms, University of Regensburg, Germany Ballistic transport in graphene antidot arrays 16.40 - 17.00 Ivan Jesus Vera Marun, University of Manchester (UK)

Direct measurement of Peltier cooling and heating in graphene 17.00 - 17.20 Guillermo Lopez-Polin, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain The influence of thermal fluctuations on the mechanical properties of graphene Parallel Session 2: Production - Theatre A 14.00 - 14.20 Yelena Grachova, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands Wafer-Scale selective CVD of graphene for device applications 14.20 - 14.40 Siamak Nakhaie, Paul-Drude-Institut für Festkörperelektronik, Berlin, Germany Synthesis of atomically thin hexagonal boron nitride films on nickel foils by molecular beam epitaxy 14.40 - 15.00 Barry Brennan, National Physical Laboratory, UK Nucleation control for large, single crystalline domains of monolayer hexagonal boron nitride via Si-Doped Fe catalysts 15.00 - 15.20 COFFEE BREAK - SPONSORED BY PLANARTECH 15.20 - 15.40 Sukanya Dhar, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India Predictive approach to growth of MoS2 atomic layers by true CVD 15.40 - 16.00 Timothy Booth, DTU Nanotech, Denmark Graphene from recyclable thin-film catalysts with improved mobility 16.00 - 16.20 Carlos Romero-Muñiz, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain Tug-of-War between corrugation and binding energy: revealing the formation of multiple Moiré patterns on a strongly interacting graphene-metal system 16.20 - 16.40 Tom Yager, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden High mobility epitaxial graphene devices via aqueous-ozone processing 16.40 - 17.00 Christoph Tegenkamp, Leibniz Universität Hannover, Germany Functionalization of graphene ribbons. The role of edges and intercalates 17.00 - 17.20 Matthias Mecklenburg, Technical University Hamburg-Harburg, Germany Aerographite – a network coherent interconnected graphite tubes. Structural tailoring by controlling the CVD and identifying mechanisms

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POSTER SESSION - SPONSORED BY TEXAS INSTRUMENTS

1. Shengnan Wang, NTT Basic Research Laboratories, Japan Atmospheric pressure chemical vapor deposition growth of graphene with millimeter-scale grain size

2. Maria O'brien, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland Chemical vapour deposition of MoS2 and WS2 monolayers in a microreactor

3. Sergei Novikov, University of Nottingham, UK High temperature molecular beam epitaxy of graphene on sapphire

4. Chan Wook Jang, Kyung Hee University, Korea Boron doping of graphene by using a supporting layer during ion implantation

5. Jungkil Kim, Kyung Hee University, Korea Graphene-assisted chemical etching of silicon

6. Viktoryia Shautsova, Imperial College London, UK hBN-assisted CVD graphene transfer

7. Maria Losurdo, CNR-INIP, Italy CVD graphene-phosphorus heterostructures

8. Klaus Pierz, Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt, Germany Surfactant assisted epitaxial graphene growth on 6H-SiC(0001)

9. Christof Neumann, Bielefeld University, Germany Towards the growth of double-layer graphene by conversion of molecular monolayers

10. Giuseppe Valerio Bianco, CNR-IMIP, Italy WS2-graphene heterostructures: fabrication by direct CVD

11. Samuel Lara, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Wafer-scale homogeneity of transport properties in epitaxial graphene on SiC

12. Wataru Norimatsu, Nagoja University, Japan Interplay between step-bunching and graphene growth on 6H-SiC (0001)

13. Luca Banszerus, RWTH Aachen University, Germany Ultra-high mobility graphene devices from chemical vapor deposion on reusable copper

14. Adrien Michon, CNRS-CRHEA, France CVD growth of graphene on SiC(0001) in hydrogen-argon atmosphere

15. Sang Jin Kim, Seoul National University, Korea Ultra-clean patterned transfer of single-layer graphene by recyclable pressure sensitive adhesive films

16. Xuekang Chen, Lanzhou Institute of Physics, China Patterning of fluorinated graphene by scanning electron beam: a potential technology for nanoelectronics

17. Jawad Ul Hassan, Linköping University, Sweden Growth of graphene on 4H-SiC(0001) using different techniques and comparison of their properties

18. Hans He, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Characterization of epitaxial graphene nanoribbons grown on SiC

19. Gabriel Soares, Paul-Drude-Institut für Festkörperelektronik, Berlin, Germany Towards the large-area growth of graphene on dielectrics using molecular beam epitaxy

20. Jamie Dean Reynolds, University of Southampton, UK Transfer-last Suspended Graphene Fabrication on Gold, Graphite and Silicon Nanostructures

21. Pawel Dabrowski, University of Lodz, Poland The electronic structure of nitrogen doped graphene: experimental and theoretical studies

22. Gui-Ping Dai, Nanchang University, China Square-shaped, single-Crystal, monolayer graphene domains by low pressure chemical vapor deposition

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23. Neeraj Mishra, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Pisa (Italy) A study on the growth of graphene on h-BN by chemical vapor deposition

24. Gholam Reza Yazdi, Linkoping University Evolution of graphene formation on different SiC polytypes

25. Guram Adamashvili, Univ of Georgia, US Resonance soliton in waveguide with graphene monolayer

26. Alessandro Principi, University of Missouri, US Violation of the Wiedemann-Franz law in hydrodynamic electron liquids

27. Haitao Liu, University of Pittsburgh, US On the intrinsic wettability of graphene and graphite

28. Eric Suarez Morell, Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María, Chile Edge states of moiré structures in graphite

29. Chao Xia, Linköping University, Sweden Functionalization of graphene grown on C-face SiC with Aluminum

30. Andrey Zabolotskiy, All-Russia Research Institute of Automatics, Russia Quantum capacitance of graphene: the role of Coulomb interactions

31. Vladimir Posvyanskiy, Niels Bohr Institute, Denmark Triplet excitations in graphene - based systems

32. Nuno J. G. Couto, Univ of Geneva, Switzerland Random strain fluctuations limit the mobility of high-quality graphene-on-substrate devices

33. Yen-Chun Chen, National Tsing-Hua University, Taiwan Rashba-type valley splitting in graphene

34. Francesco Maria Dimitri Pellegrino, NEST, Italy Quantum Optics in graphene quantum Hall polariton fluids

35. Christian Berger, Univ of Manchester, UK Large-area fabrication and nanomechanical characterisation of suspended graphene membranes

36. Luis Rosales, Universidad Tecnica Federico Santa Maria, Chile Bound states in the continuum: localization of Dirac-like fermions

37. Henning Schomerus, Lancaster University, UK Vortex-induced defect states, degeneracy, and sublattice polarization of strain-induced pseudo-Landau levels

38. Jacob Otto,Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf, Germany Investigations on the anisotropy of charge carrier excitation in graphene with low energetic photons

39. Ming-Hao Liu, University of Regensburg, Germany Scalable Tight-Binding Model for Graphene

40. Chon-Saar Chu, National Chiao Tung University, Hsinchu, Taiwan Nodal adsorbate bound states in armchair graphene nanoribbons: Fano resonances and adsorbate recognition in weak disorder

41. Srinivasan Raghavan, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India Thermodynamic modelling of W-C-O-H-S system for controlled CVD growth of WS2 atomic layers

42. Hiske Overweg, ETH Zürich Encapsulated bilayer graphene with side contacts for nanostructures

43. Fedor Tkatschenko, Universität Regensburg, Germany Effect of hydrogen and hydrogen- clusters on electronic and transport properties in graphene

44. Mohammad Zarenia, University of Antwerp, Belgium Electron-hole superfluidity in double few-layer graphene

45. Cay-Christian Kalmbach, Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt, Germany 1/f noise due to nonequilibrium mesoscopic conductance fluctuations in epitaxial graphene

46. Mehdi Neek-Amal, University Of Antwerp, , Belgium Tunable Langevin dynamics of the fluctuations in freestanding Graphene

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47. Andrea Latgé, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Brasil Tuning Fano resonances in zigzag hexagonal graphene rings

48. Geliang Yu, Univ of Manchester, UK Detecting topological currents in graphene superlattices

49. Diana Cosma, Lancaster University, UK Strain-induced modifications of transport in gated graphene nanoribbons

50. Leopoldo Álvarez, Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales de Madrid, Spain Graphene growth on transparent Ruthenium ultra-thin films: Ru structure and graphene properties

51. George Volonakis, University of Oxford, UK Origins of the work-function modification in edge-functionalized graphene.

52. Chiashain Chuang, National Institute of Standard and Technology, US The linear magnetoresistance transition in low carrier density SiC (0001) epitaxial graphene

53. Ivy Irazado-Colambo, IEMN, France Electronic properties of single graphene domains on SiC(000-1) grown by Si flux-assisted MBE

54. Deepika Goyal, Indian Institute of Technology Ropar, India Edge configurational effect on band gaps in graphene nanoribbons

55. Michael Hilke, McGill University, Canada Graphene growth dynamics and isotopic phonon engineering

56. Julio Chacon, FU Berlin, Germany Optical properties of highly doped graphene

57. Christos Melios, NPL, UK Mapping of nanomechanical properties of quasi-freestanding epitaxial graphene

58. Marko Petrovic, University of Antwerp, Belgium Fano resonances in the conductance of graphene nanoribbons with side gates

59. Slavisa Milovanovic, University of Antwerp, , Belgium Interplay between snake and quantum edge states in a graphene Hall bar with a pn-junction

60. Yanmeng Shi, Univ of California, Riverside, US Measurement of energy gaps of integer and fractional quantum Hall states in suspended bilayer graphene devices

61. Aline Luciana Schoenhalz, Univ of Namur, Belgium DFT study on the first stages of growth of N-doped graphene

62. Mikhail Titov, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands Coulomb drag reversal due to excitonic fluctuations in graphene

63. Pablo San-Jose, ICMM-CSIC, Spain Graphene-based Majoranas

64. Marius Eich, ETH Zurich, Switzerland Electronic transport in graphene nanoribbons with wings

65. Milton Pereira, Federal University of Ceara, Brazil Monolayer-bilayer graphene quantum dots

66. Faris Kadi, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany Microscopic Study on the Terahertz Carrier Relaxation and Cooling Dynamics in Graphene

67. Hikari Tomori, Univ. Tsukuba, Japan Electron transport in graphene with one-dimensional local strain

68. Tohru Kawarabayashi, Toho University, Japan Landau levels in general tilted massive Dirac fermions: stability against randomness

69. Hong-Yeol Kim, Univ of Manchester, UK Stable doping in multilayer CVD graphene by thermal annealing

70. Roland J. Koch, TU Chemnitz, Germany Surface plasmon polaritons in graphene on SiC(0001)

71. Vanya Darakchieva, Linkoping University, Sweden

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Decoupled few layer graphene with no rotational disorder on C-face 4H-SiC and 3C-SiC 72. Pertti Hakonen, Aalto Univ, Finland

Klein tunneling, contact doping, and pn-interfaces in gated suspended graphene 73. Nancy Sandler, Ohio University, US

Local sublattice symmetry breaking for graphene with a centro-symmetric deformation 74. Peter Olbrich, University of Regensburg, Germany

THz radiation induced ratchet effects in graphene with a lateral periodic potential 75. Peter Makk, University of Basel, Switzerland

Quantized single mode guiding in ultraclean suspended graphene 76. Artsem Shylau, TU Denmark

Plasmons in single and N-layer metallic armchair graphene nanoribbons 77. Samvel Badalyan, TU Denmark

Plasmons in double structures of metallic armchair nanoribbons and monolayers of graphene 78. Andreas Johansson, University of Jyväskylä, Finland

Non-linear optical imaging and tuning of properties of graphene 79. Xingli Wang, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

Growth of MoS2 layers with various shapes and stacks with vapor solid deposition 80. Alexey Ozerin, Vereshchagin Institute for High Pressure Physics, Russia

Multimode cyclotron resonance in graphene 81. Jean Spiece, Lancaster University, UK

Quantitative nanothermal study of 2D materials by SThM and finite elements simulations 82. Florian Libisch, Vienna University of Technology, Austria

Size quantization signatures in graphene quantum point contacts 83. Jian Huang, University of Oxford, UK

Hot carrier relaxation of Dirac fermions in bilayer epitaxial graphene 84. Marina Nazarova, Frei University of Berlin, Germany

CVD growth of graphene on proton irradiation targets: the case of tantalum 85. Denis Bandurin, University of Manchester (UK)

Tuning valley currents in dual-gated bilayer graphene

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SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME – TUESDAY, 23 JUNE 2015

08.00 - 18.30 EXHIBITION SESSION ONE, the Drum 08.30 - 17.00 THE REGISTRATION / HELPDESK IS OPEN, the Drum 08.40 - 12.30 PLENARY SESSION, Theatre B 12.30 - 14.00 LUNCH, Eats Restaurant 13.00 - 14.00 FRINGE SESSION –PERSPECTIVE ON RECENT ADVANCES IN 2D MATERIALS BY 2D MATERIALS

JOURNAL, Theatre A 14.00 - 17.20 PARALLEL SESSIONS ONE & TWO (Contributed Orals) 17.30 - 19.30 POSTER SESSION - SPONSORED BY 2D MATERIALS JOURNAL, the Drum

PLENARY SESSION, THEATRE B

08.40 - 09.15 James Hone Properties and applications of graphene and 2D materials in the ultraclean limit using van der Waals heterostructures 09.15 - 09.50 Guangyu Zhang

Nanostructured graphene: fabrication, control and properties 09.50 - 10.25 Michael Crommie Tuning the nanoscale energy landscape of graphene with molecular quantum dots 10.25 - 10.45 COFFEE BREAK / EXHIBITION 10.45 - 11.20 Yuanbo Zhang Electronic properties of novel two-dimensional materials 11.20 - 11. 55 Jiwoong Park Coloring, stitching, and twisting for atomically thin circuitry 11.55 - 12.30 Abhay Pasupathy Hidden kekule order of ghost atoms on monolayer graphene FRINGE SESSION, THEATRE A

13.00 - 14.00 2D Materials Journal: Vladimir Fal’ko and Byoung Hee Hong Perspective on recent advances in 2D materials PARALLEL SESSIONS ONE & TWO

Parallel Session 1: Fundamentals, Devices, Sensors - Theatre B 14.00 - 14.20 Jeil Jung, University of Seoul, Korea The interdependent atomic and electronic structures of graphene on hexagonal boron nitride 14.20 - 14.40 Tim Wehling, University of Bremen, Germany

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From optics to superconductivity: Many body effects in transition metal dichalcogenides 14.40 - 15.00 Mark Greenaway, the University of Nottingham, UK Landau level spectroscopy reveals the chirality and Klein tunnelling of electrons in twisted graphene tunnel transistors 15.00 - 15.20 COFFEE BREAK / EXHIBITION 15.20 - 15.40 Kiyoung Lee, Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology, Korea Vertical graphene and semiconductor field effect transistors for low power electronics 15.40 - 16.00 Gianluca Fiori, Universita' di Pisa, Italy Ab-initio simulations of two-dimensional materials-based transistors 16.00 - 16.20 Dominik Bischoff, ETH Zurich, Switzerland Current flow at zero bias. Broken detailed balance in strongly coupled graphene nanoribbons 16.20 - 16.40 Santiago Cartamil-Bueno, TU Delft, Netherlands Large array of graphene drumhead resonators for sensing applications 16.40 - 17.00 Artjom Berholts, University of Tartu, Estonia Functionalization of graphene by pulsed laser deposition: impact on gas sensitivity 17.00 - 17.20 Maria M. Giangregorio, Institute of Inorganic Methodologies and of Plasmas, Italy Graphene hybrids for optical gas- and bio-sensing Parallel Session 2: Fundamentals, Spintronics, Magnetism – Theatre A 14.00 - 14.20 Josep Ingla-Aynés, University of Groningen, Netherlands Electrically controllable long distance spin transport in high mobility graphene devices 14.20 - 14.40 Zhe Wang, The University of Geneva, Switzerland Spin-orbit coupling and weak antilocalization in graphene on WS2 14.40 - 15.00 Andor Kormanyos, University of Konstanz, Germany k.p theory and magnetoconductance oscillations in monolayer transition metal dichalcogenide semiconductors 15.00 - 15.20 COFFEE BREAK / EXHIBITION 15.20 - 15.40 Moshe Ben Shalom, University of Manchester, UK Superconducting proximity effect in ballistic graphene: from Fabry-Pérot oscillations to universal fluctuations of the critical current 15.40 - 16.00 Srijit Goswami, TU Delft, Netherlands Ballistic Josephson Junctions in Edge-contacted Graphene 16.00 - 16.20 Chuan Li, University of Twente, Netherlands Full range of proximity effect probed with S/Graphene/S junctions 16.20 - 16.40 Ekaterina Khestanova, University of Manchester, UK Superconductivity in mono and few layer NbSe2 16.40 - 17.00 Davide Costanzo, University of Geneva, Switzerland Electrostatically induced Superconductivity in transition metal dichalcogenides. from bulk-WS2 to mono-layer MoS2 17.00 - 17.20 Jair Freitas, Federal University of Espirito Santo, Brazil

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Hyperfine magnetic field in magnetic graphene-based materials. DFT calculations and NMR experiments POSTER SESSION - SPONSORED BY 2D MATERIALS JOURNAL

1. Denis Kochan, University of Regensburg, Germany

Theory of spin relaxation in mono- and bi-layer graphene 2. Alexey Kaverzin, University of Groningen, Netherlands

Electron transport non-locality in hydrogenated graphene 3. Jack Warren, University of Manchester, UK

Novel spin injection into graphene 4. Jeongsu Lee, University of Regensburg ,Germany

Proximity anisotropic magnetoresistance in graphene 5. Luis Brey, ICMM-CSIC ,Spain

Effect of location and interference between adatoms on the Spin-Orbit coupling in Graphene 6. Siddhartha Omar, University of Groningen, Netherlands

Spin relaxation in graphene in the presence of cobalt porphyrin molecules 7. Leonor Chico, ICMM-CSIC ,Spain

Symmetries of quantum transport with Rashba spin-orbit: Graphene spintronics 8. Levente Tapaszto, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary

Graphene nanoribbons with magnetic edges 9. Ameneh Najafi, Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands

The role of Si-dangling bonds in ferromagnetic behavior of hydrogenated epitaxial graphene on SiC

10. Hee Chul Park, Korea Institute for Advanced Study, Korea Tunable giant resistance in vertical heterojunctions based on ferromagnetic graphene

11. Martin Gmitra, University of Regensburg ,Germany Proximity induced spin-orbit coupling in graphene on MoS2

12. Mallikarjuna Gurram, University of Groningen, Netherlands Magnetotransport in graphene with self-assembled layers of magnetic molecules

13. Mahmoud Asmar, OHIO UNIVERSITY, Greece Symmetry breaking effects on spin and electronic transport in graphene

14. Romain Danneau, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany Proximity induced superconductivity in clean bilayer graphene van der Waals heterostructures tuned by band gap engineering

15. Yu-Shu Wu, National Tsing-Hua University, Taiwan The VOI-based valleytronics in graphene

16. Ning Kang, Peking University, China Gate tunable nonlinear rectification effects in three-terminal graphene nanojunctions

17. Pascal Butti, EMPA, Switzerland Efficiency of graphene based rectifiers

18. Toshikaze Kariyado, University of Tsukuba, Japan Correlation induced local spin moment of the topological boundary states of graphene nanoflake

19. Mohammad Sherafati, Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales de Madrid, Spain The nature of the defect-induced π-magnetism in graphene from the Gutzwiller variational method

20. Akinobu Kanda, University of Tsukuba, Japan Characterization of graphene/metal interface and its improvement by insertion of thin nano-carbon layer

21. Yohta Sata, University of Tokyo, Japan Vertical field effect transistors based on graphene/TMD van der Waals heterostructures

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22. Maria Augustyniak-Jablokow, Institute of Molecular Physics of Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland Stabilization of edge magnetism in the modified graphene

23. Roman Strzelczyk, Institute of Molecular Physics of Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland Magnetic properties of hydrogenated graphene

24. Jonathan Prance, Lancaster University, UK Ballistic transport and superconducting proximity effect in graphene SNS junctions with highly transmitting contacts

25. Sungjong Woo, Korea Institute for Advanced Study, Korea Poisson's ratio of layered two-dimensional crystals

26. Daniel Midtvedt, Max-Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems, Germany Strain-displacement relation and strain-engineering in 2D materials

27. Michael Mohn, Ulm University, Germany High-energy plasmons in graphene and MoS2 heterostructures

28. Axel Martin Eriksson, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Nonresonant excitation of mechanical vibrations in graphene via vibron-plasmon interaction

29. Seyda Horzum, University of Antwerp Dimensional-crossover-driven bandgap transition in h-AlN

30. Hasan Sahin, University of Antwerp Theoretical and experimental investigation of monolayer portlandite

31. Jarosław Judek, Warsaw University of Technology, Poland High accuracy determination of the thermal properties of supported 2D materials

32. Colin Woods, Univ of Manchester, UK Commensurate-incommensurate transition for graphene on hexagonal boron nitride.

33. Tilmar Kuemmell, Universität Duisburg-Essen, Germany Manipulating the carrier distribution in k space in MoS2 bilayers

34. M. Pilar López-Sancho, CSIC, Spain Topological transition in disordered Chern insulators

35. Sihem Jaziri, aculté des sciences de bizerte, Tunisia Binding energies of neutral and charged excitons in monolayer tungsten disulfide

36. Dominik Szczesniak, Qatar Environment and Energy Research Institute, Qatar Quantum electronic transport in graphene/molybdenum disulphide heterostructures

37. Mariusz Zdrojek, Warsaw University of Technology, Poland Temperature-dependent thermal conductivity of supported MoS2 monolayers

38. Irina Antonova, Institute of Semiconductor Physics, Russia Barriers and localized electronic states in fluorographene films with graphene quantum dots

39. Matthias Droth, University of Konstanz, Germany Piezoelectricity in planar boron nitride via a geometric phase

40. Tjorven Johnsen, RWTH Aachen University, Germany Symmetry broken states of high mobility graphene on BN for combined transport and STM experiments

41. Peter Nemes-Incze, RWTH Aachen University, Germany Reversible switching of pseudomagnetic field patterns in graphene nanomembranes by a scanning tunneling microscope tip

42. Nils Freitag, RWTH Aachen University, Germany Magnetic field induced localization within the unit cells of commensurately stacked graphene on hexagonal boron nitride revealed by scanning tunneling spectroscopy

43. Aurélie Pierret, TU Berlin, Germany Fabrication and optical properties of transition metal dichalcogenide heterostructures

44. Avgust Yurgens, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Graphene weak localization in inhomogeneous magnetic fields

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45. Ricardo Ribeiro, Universidade do Minho, Portugal 2D Dichalcogenides for light absorption applications

46. Gautam Mukhopadhyay, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, India Strained Graphene-like BeO monolayer: a DFT Study

47. Naoto Yabuki, University of Tokyo, Japan Observation of Josephson current in NbSe2/NbSe2 van der Waals junction

48. Felix Lüönd, METAS, Switzerland AC Quantum Hall effect in epitaxial graphene

49. Jun Kang, University of Antwerp, Belgium Tuning carrier confinement in MoS2/WS2 lateral heterostructure

50. James Chapman, Univ of Manchester, UK Optical reflectivity and doping of graphene intercalation compounds

51. Corinne Monnier, FIST SA, France Graphene european IP overview

52. Cheol-Joo Kim, Cornell University, UK Chiral topological states in two-atom-thick graphene metamaterials

53. Petr Neugebauer, Universität Stuttgart, Germany Design and application of a spectrometer for meV magneto-optical excitation studies in graphene based materials

54. Nedjma Bendiab, Université Joseph Fourier, France Strain field in graphene: a substrate story?

55. Nedjma Bendiab, Université Joseph Fourier, France Transistors based on graphene or double wall carbon nanotube hybrids for optoelectronics

56. Frederic Roux, CEA, France Integration of CVD graphene as transparent front electrode into conventional a-Si:H thin film solar cells

57. Byungjin Cho, Korea Institute of Materials Science (KIMS) CVD-synthesized atomic-layer MoS2 for sensing applications

58. Miriam Ferrer-Huerta, Lancaster University, UK Graphene ring nanoelectrodes (GRiNs): application as an electroanalytical sensor

59. Kirstie Mcallister, Konkuk University, Korea Towards high resolution mass detectors using electromechanical resonators

60. Dong Zhang, Tongji University, China Graphene film based strain sensor prepared by spray coating

61. Po-Yuan Teng, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan Ultrasensitive graphene image sensor

62. Olga Kazakova, NPL, UK Environmental tuning of local electronic properties of graphene nanodevices

63. Andrea Francesco Verre, Univ of Manchester, UK Large-scale multiplex functionalization of graphene using dip-pen nanolithography

64. Viktor Zólyomi, Lancaster University, UK Monolayers of gallium and indium chalcogenides

65. Enrico Simonetto, Politecnico di Torino, Italy Grain boundaries and electrical behaviour in CVD graphene: a comprehensive approach

66. Robin Dolleman, Delft University of Technology Graphene squeeze film pressure sensors

67. Nicholas Kay, Lancaster University, UK Time-dependant electrostatic and electro-mechanical phenomena in graphene NEMS

68. Andrey Turchanin, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany Lateral heterostructures of two-dimensional carbon materials

69. Antti Laitinen, Aalto University, Finland

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1/f-noise in suspended bilayer graphene 70. Stephanie Heerema, Kavli Institute of Nanoscience Delft, The Netherlands

DNA sensing with nanopores in graphene nanoribbons 71. Dejan Davidovic, TU Delft

Suspended 2D membranes as pressure sensors 72. Quentin Wilmart, Ecole Normale Supérieure-PSL, CNRS, France

Active graphene contacts 73. Shanshan Chen, Xiamen University, China

Controllable synthesis and the thermal conductivity of monolayer and bilayer graphene 74. Nikodem Szpak, University Duisburg-Essen, Germany

Transport phenomena in deformed graphene: magnetic field versus curvature 75. Ramon Carrillo-Bastos, Ohio University, US

Conductance and LDOS of GNR with a central deformation. 76. Heiko Weber, Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany

Partial dislocations in bilayer graphene and their strong influence on charge transport 77. Ioannis Polyzos, FORTH/ICE-HT), Patras, Greece

Uniaxial tensile strain on free-standing graphene 78. Diana Tranca, Technische Universität Dresden, Germany

Decoration of armchair nanoribbons with alkaline earth metals or transition metals for hydrogen storage

79. Ghazi Alsharif, Lancaster University, UK Nanoscale mapping of spreading resistance of graphene layers

80. Sten Vollebregt, Delft University of Technology Molybdenum grown CVD graphene Schottky diodes

81. Jianfeng Bao, EcoTopia Science Institute, Nagoya University, Japan Buffer-layer-free graphene on SiC (0001) by rapid cooling

82. John Wallbank, Lancaster University, UK Resonant tunnelling in graphene/boron-nitride/graphene heterostructures

83. Lee Hague, University of Manchester, UK The optical properties of monolayer transition-metal di-chalcogenides suspended over optical cavities.

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SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME – WEDNESDAY, 24 JUNE 2015

08.00 - 18.30 EXHIBITION SESSION TWO, the Drum 08.30 - 17.00 THE REGISTRATION / HELPDESK IS OPEN, the Drum 08.40 - 12.30 PLENARY SESSION, Theatre B 12.30 - 14.00 LUNCH, Eats Restaurant 13.00 - 14.00 FRINGE SESSION - BBC WORLD SERVICE: THE FORUM, Theatre A 14.00 - 17.20 PARALLEL SESSIONS ONE & TWO (Contributed Orals) 17.30 - 19.30 FIRST FOUNDING MEETING - WOMEN IN GRAPHENE (open for everybody), 2nd floor. 17.30 - 19.30 POSTER SESSION, SPONSORED BY SMART ELEMENTS, the Drum 17.00 - 21.00 PARALLEL ACTIVITY - GUIDED TOURS IN THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY ON DEANSGATE

PLENARY SESSION, THEATRE B

08.40 - 09.15 Xiaodong Xu Optoelectronics of 2D Semiconductors and Heterostructures 09.15 - 09.50 Marco Polini Loss mechanisms in graphene plasmonics 09.50 - 10.25 Amir Yacoby TBD 10.25 - 10.45 COFFEE BREAK / EXHIBITION 10.45 - 11.20 Klaus Müllen A polymer chemistry of graphene 11.20 - 11. 55 Manish Chhowalla Phase-engineered low-resistance contacts for ultrathin MoS2 transistors 11.55 - 12.30 Jonathan Coleman Production of nanosheets by liquid exfoliation: The route to applications

FRINGE SESSION, NATIONAL GRAPHENE INSTITUTE

13.00 - 14.00 BBC World service: The Forum, Bridget Kendall Flatwords: What’s next for 2D materials?

PARALLEL SESSIONS ONE & TWO

Parallel Session 1: Inks, Coatings, Energy – Theatre B 14.00 - 14.20 Vincenzo Palermo, CNR Bologna, Italy

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Electrochemical production of graphene/Fe2O3 composite foams as high- capacity electrodes 14.20 - 14.40 Claudia Backes, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland Spectroscopic metrics to determine monolayer content, mean number of layer and lateral dimensions of liquid exfoliated transition metal dichalchogenides 14.40 - 15.00 Zhikun Zheng, Dresden University of Technology, Germany Graphene and two-dimensional polymer heterostructures: a new paradigm of materials 15.00 - 15.20 COFFEE BREAK / EXHIBITION 15.20 - 15.40 Daryl Mcmanus, University of Manchester, UK Inkjet printing of water-based 2D crystal inks 15.40 - 16.00 George Bepete, CNRS, France Surfactant free, aqueous monolayer graphene suspensions 16.00 - 16.20 Gil Gonçalves, University of Aveiro, Portugal Graphene oxide foams for Hg removal from contaminated water 16.20 - 16.40 Vito Di Noto, University of Padova, Italy “Core-shell” carbon nitride electrocatalysts for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) based on graphene and related materials for application in low-temperature fuel cells 16.40 - 17.00 Micah Green,Texas A&M University, US Tailored crumpling and unfolding of spray-dried pristine graphene and graphene oxide sheets 17.00 - 17.20 Byung Hee Hong, Seul National University, Korea Evolution and reaction of nanobubbles in graphene liquid cells: An in situ TEM study Parallel Session 2: Fundamentals, Characterization – Theatre A 14.00 - 14.20 Annick Loiseau, CNRS-ONERA, France Exfoliating black Phosphorous down to monolayer: photo-oxidation and quantum confinement 14.20 - 14.40 Marcos Pimenta, UFMG, Brasil Study of excitonic transitions in 2D transition metal dichalcogenides by resonance Raman spectroscopy 14.40 - 15.00 Eva Arianna Aurelia Pogna, Politecnico di Milano, Italy Disentangling intra and intervalley dynamics in monolayer MoS2 by ultrafast optical techniques 15.00 - 15.20 COFFEE BREAK / EXHIBITION 15.20 - 15.40 Margherita Marsili, CNR Modena, Italy Bandgap renormalization governs the ultrafast response of MoS2 15.40 - 16.00 Stephan Winnerl, Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf, Germany Strong Auger scattering in Landau-quantized graphene 16.00 - 16.20 Adam Gilbertson, Imperial College London, UK Probing graphene-nanoparticle interactions via hot carrier dynamics 16.20 - 16.40 Johannes Jobst, Leiden University, Netherlands Contactless probing of local potential and band structure in two-dimensional materials by low-energy electron microscopy

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16.40 - 17.00 Hiral Patel, Oregon State University, US Mapping a Fine-Structure of Exciton States in Twisted Bilayer Graphene 17.00 - 17.20 Sandro Mignuzzi, National Physical Laboratory Near-field Raman spectroscopy imaging of graphene defects on the nanoscale PARALLEL ACTIVITIES

17.30 - 19.30 First Founding Meeting – Women in Graphene, Room on 2nd floor 17.00 - 21.00 Guided Tours in the John Rylands Library on Deansgate

POSTER SESSION – SPONSORED BY SMART ELEMENTS

1. Wei-Yen Woon, National Central University, Taiwan

Graphene reduction dynamics unveiled 2. Kacper Grodecki, Institute of Electronic Materials Technology, Poland

Observation of S-H vibrations in hydrogenated graphene grown on SiC(0001) by Raman spectroscopy

3. Pantelis Bampoulis, University of Twente, Netherlands 2D ice fractals intercalated between Graphene and Mica

4. Silvio Morgenstern, Kassel University, Germany Ultrafast electron diffraction on nano-crystalline graphene

5. Akira Akaishi, UEC-Tokyo, Japan Water layers on graphene surface

6. Felix Herziger, TU Berlin, Germany Two-dimensional analysis of the double-resonant 2D Raman mode in bilayer graphene

7. Leonard Schue, CNRS/Onera, France Structural and optical characterisation of h-BN layers

8. Félicien Schopfer, LNE, France Graphene sets a convenient quantum Hall resistance standard and supports the SI redefinition

9. Christian Raidel, TU Chemnitz, Germany Molecular adsorbate doping of bilayer graphene under synchrotron radiation

10. Leandro Malard, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brasil Defect induced supercollision cooling in graphene

11. Peter Beton, University of Nottingham, UK Molecular adsorption and organisation on boron nitride and molybdenum disulphide

12. Jae-Ung Lee, Sogang University, Korea Anomalous excitonic resonance Raman effects in few-layered MoS2

13. Christoph Stampfer, RWTH Aachen University, Germany Raman spectroscopy as probe of nanometer-scale strain variations in graphene

14. Sandro Mignuzzi, NPL, UK Raman spectroscopy of defective single-layer MoS2

15. Vishal Panchal, NPL, UK Effect of humidity on electronic properties of CVD graphene

16. Jong Bo Park, Seoul National University, Korea Growth dynamics and gas transport mechanism of nanobubbles in graphene liquid cell

17. Emanuele Poliani, TU Berlin, Germany Tip-enhanced Raman and micro-Raman study of GraFold printed graphene folds

18. Bagila Baitimbetova, K.I.Satpaev National Technical University, Kazakhstan Preparation of graphene using aromatic hydrocarbons and investigation of its structural features

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19. Masato Imai, Nagoya University, Japan TEM observation of copper intercalation in graphene on SiC(0001)

20. Tibor Lehnert, Ulm University, Germany Imaging radiation sensitive materials in a graphene heterostructure

21. Yanfei Yang, NIST, US Millimeter-size epitaxial graphene for the next generation of resistance standard

22. Félix Jiménez-Villacorta, ICMM-CSIC, Spain Ag nanoparticle/graphene transparent SERS substrates: evolution with nanoparticle content

23. Alba Centeno, GRAPHENEA S.A, Spain Influence of graphene cleanliness on its optical properties

24. Malkolm Hinnemo, Uppsala University, Sweden Surface-enhanced raman scattering dependence on residues on graphene surface

25. Grzegorz Gawlik, Institute of Electronic Materials Technology, Poland Ion beam induced defects in CVD graphene on glass

26. Benjamin Robinson, Lancaster University, UK Modification of graphene surfaces using 2D micelles

27. Francois Ducastelle, Lem, Onera-Cnrs, France Nitrogen-doped graphene: a theoretical discussion of spectroscopic experiments (STS, ARPES)

28. Deborah Prezzi, CNR - Nanoscience Institute, Italy A map of graphene nanoribbons from optical and Raman spectroscopies: Insights from ab-initio calculations

29. Eliel Neto, UFMG, Brazil Raman spectroscopy in twisted bilayer graphene

30. Jae Hoon Bong, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Korea Graphene as an ultrathin diffusion barrier for advanced Cu metallization

31. Maciej Rogala, University of Lodz, Poland Graphene based data storage: the role of water in resistive switching in graphene oxide

32. Lara Ferrighi, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy Doped and co-doped graphene on copper metal substrate: properties and molecular oxygen reactivity

33. Myung Jin Park, seoul national university, Korea Wafer-scale nanoperforation of single-layer graphene by arrayed Pt nanoparticles

34. Kyoungjun Choi, Seoul National University, Korea Reduced water vapor transmission rate of graphene gas barrier films for flexible organic field-effect transistors

35. Claudia Bautista Flores, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico Graphene on liquid surfaces: a way to induce doping during transfer process

36. Johan Liu, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Graphene heat spreader by liquid phase exfoliation for thermal management in electronic packaging

37. Ongun Ozcelik, Bilkent University, UNAM, Turkey Graphene / boron-nitride nanoscale capacitors

38. Dong Jin Kim, Seoul National University, Korea N-doped graphene quantum sheets for hydrogen production

39. Vito Dario Camiola, CNR - Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa, Italy Hydrogen transport by means of flexural phonons in graphene multilayers

40. Valentina Tozzini, Istituto Nanoscienze Cnr, Italy Hydrogen interaction with statically and dynamically rippled graphene

41. Jun Nakamura, UEC-Tokyo, Japan Oxygen reduction reaction on the basal plane of nitrogen-doped graphene

42. Wayne Harrison, Univ of Manchester, UK

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PIM-1/graphene mixed matrix membranes for molecular separations 43. Cristina Botas, CICenergiGUNE, Spain

Sn/SnO2@rGO self-standing anodes for Lithium ion batteries 44. Simone Casaluci, University of Rome "Tor Vergata", Italy

Perovskite solar cells based on P3HT doped with functionalized graphene nanoplatelets 45. Constanta Cristina Gheorghiu, CEA Grenoble, France

Doped graphene as a noble metal-free catalyst for the ORR in acidic media 46. Weixiang Chen, hejiang University, China

Facile synthesis of graphene-like MoS¬2/graphene composites for high-performance lithium ion battery application

47. Saveria Santangelo, Università “Mediterranea”, Italy Free-standing cobalt oxide-based graphene enriched mats to be used as electrode nanomaterials in flexible Li-ion batteries

48. Kun-Ping Huang Huang, Industrial Technology Research Institute, Taiwan Low temperature synthesized and nitrogen-doped few-layer graphene sheets

49. Jing Ning, Xidian University, China 3-D freestanding thin graphite with multi-level porosity for high performance Mn3O4 supercapacitors

50. Kamal Batra, Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Kharagpur, India Development of modified graphene - TiO2 nanostructured materials in energy applications

51. David Alfredo Pacheco Tanaka, Tecnalia Research and Innovation, Spain Graphene based capacitive deionization for an energy efficient desalination system.

52. Dong Wang, Xidian University, China Electrical and optical properties of layer-stacked graphene transparent electrodes using self-supporting transfer method

53. Kai-Ge Zhou, University of Manchester, UK 2D-carbon nitride membrane as efficient catalyst for photo-degradation of organic pollutants in water

54. Monica Alberto, University of Manchester, UK Graphene-based composite membrane for alcohol/water separation

55. Choong Sun Kim, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Korea Graphene with a screen printed mesh substrate as a thermoacoustic loudspeaker

56. Zhanna Boeva, Åbo Akademi University, Finland Composite materials of polyaniline and exfoliated graphite for solid-state electrochemical sensor applications

57. Tom Lindfors, Åbo Akademi University, Finland Application of composites of graphene derivatives and conducting polymers in solid-state electrochemical sensors

58. Claudio Silva, University of Manchester, UK Reduced graphene oxide/polyaniline composites for energy storage devices

59. Mark Bissett, University of Manchester, UK Graphene-MoS2 Composites for Electrochemical Energy Storage

60. Shaikh Nayeem Faisal, University of Sydney, Australia Three-dimensional nanostructured nitrogen-doped graphene/carbon nanotube composites for fabricating high volumetric flexible supercapacitor

61. Keith Paton, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland Spectroscopic methods for high throughput characterization of liquid-phase exfoliated graphene

62. Robert Young, University of Manchester, UK Quantitative determination of the spatial orientation of graphene by polarized raman spectroscopy

63. Roland Gillen, TU Berlin, Germany

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Assessing and improving the DFT+D3 method for van-der-Waals interactions in layered materials 64. Anna Ott, University of Cambridge, UK

Contaminations and quantification of defects in doped graphene by Raman spectroscopy 65. Yuyoung Shin, University of Manchester, UK

Raman spectroscopy of highly pressurized graphene membrane 66. Sara Dale, University of Bath, Uk

Electrical transport & Raman spectroscopy of exfoliated ReSe2 flakes 67. Elisa Riccardi, Université Paris Diderot, France

Probing suspended graphene devices via micro-Raman Spectroscopy 68. Tim Batten, Renishaw, UK

3D characterization of large h-BN crystals using Raman spectroscopy 69. Sebastian Heeg, University of Manchester, UK

Quantum interferences in plasmon-enhanced Raman scattering unraveled by graphene 70. Izabela Kaminska, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Poland

Energy transfer in graphene-based hybrid nanostructures investigated with fluorescence microscopy

71. Niels Flach, Graphendo ltd Graphendo's single-sheet synthetic graphene oxide: a new leaf on the graphene tree

72. Amin Taheri Najafabadi, The University of British Columbia, Canada Paired electrosynthesis of graphene sheets in aprotic ionic liquids

73. Sebastian Mackowski, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Poland Fluorescence enhancement of individual emitters deposited on reduced graphene oxide flakes

74. Lucie Speyer, Institut Jean Lamour, France Study of the influence of thermal treatment on multi-layer graphene samples synthesized by solvothermal reaction

75. Saveria Santangelo, Università “Mediterranea”, Italy Stabilization of TiO2 nanoparticles at the reduced graphene oxide surface promoted by microwave heating

76. Hartmut Roskos, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt, Germany THz-spectroscopy of vertically aligned carbon nanotubes interacting with ammonia molecules

77. Bora Lee, Seoul National University, Korea Enhanced sensitivity of DNA sensing by surface-passivated graphene oxides

78. Aneta Drabinska, University of Warsaw, Poland Electron scattering in graphene with NaCl nanoparticles adsorbed

79. Del Rio Castillo, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia,Italy Environmentally-friendly graphene ink as anode in Li-ion battery

80. Ivan G. Ivanov, Linköping University, Sweden Investigation of buffer layer, as-grown and hydrogenated graphene on SiC using combined Raman-reflectance mapping

81. Silvia Milana, University of Cambridge, UK Determination of shear modulus and out of plane Young's modulus of layered materials by Raman spectroscopy

82. Janina Maultzsch, TU Berlin, Germany Interlayer Raman modes in few-layer MoS2

83. Christopher Sole, University of Liverpool, UK In situ Raman spectroscopy studies of electrochemical lithium intercalation into graphitic and graphenic carbons

84. Recep Zan, Niğde University, Niğde, Turkey Visualising 2D crystals and their heterostructures via STEM

85. Alexandre Felten, University of Namur, Belgium Hydrogenation of graphene: the effect of the hydrogen plasma chemistry

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86. Simon Drieschner, Technische Universität München, Germany Pore size controlled graphene foams with high volumetric and specific capacitance grown by chemical vapor deposition

87. Federica Valentini, Tor Vergata University, Italy Graphene in cultural heritage

88. Georgia Tsoukleri, ICEHT-FORTH, Greece Graphene polymer composites to withstand large deformations

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SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME – THURSDAY, 25 JUNE 2015

08.00 - 18.30 EXHIBITION SESSION TWO, the Drum 08.30 - 17.00 THE REGISTRATION / HELPDESK IS OPEN, the Drum 08.40 - 12.30 PLENARY SESSION, Theatre B 12.30 - 14.00 LUNCH, Eats Restaurant 13.00 - 14.00 FRINGE SESSION – SARA LOWES: GRAPHENE SUITE, the Martin Harris Centre (Building no. 42 on the campus map) 14.00 - 17.20 PARALLEL SESSIONS ONE & TWO (Contributed Orals) 17.30 - 18.30 FRINGE SESSION – GRAPHENE IN NATURE JOURNALS: MEET THE EDITORS, Theatre A 17.30 - 19.30 POSTER SESSION, the Drum 20.00 - 00.30 CONFERENCE DINNER

POSTER PRIZE SPONSORED BY IOP, NPG AND ROYAL SOCIETY OF CHEMISTRY

PLENARY SESSION, THEATRE B

08.40 - 09.15 Klaas-Jan Tielrooij Photodetection using graphene and related 2D materials 09.15 - 09.50 Andrea C. Ferrari TBD 09.50 - 10.25 Robert Roelver Graphene @Bosch: from fabrication to sensors 10.25 - 10.45 COFFEE BREAK, SPONSORED BY GRAPHENE NANOTECH 10.45 - 11.20 Nigel Salter Cost effective production of high quality graphene nano platelets 11.20 - 11. 55 Ester Vasquez Few-layer graphene from Ball-Milling: preparation of hybrid hydrogels 11.55 - 12.30 Bengt Fadeel Safety assessment of engineered nanomaterials: focus on the reciprocal interactions between carbon-based nanomaterials (CBMs) and cells of the innate immune system

FRINGE SESSION, THE MARTIN HARRIS CENTRE (BUILDING NO. 42 ON THE CAMPUS MAP)

13.00 - 14.00 Sara Lowes: composer in residence at the National Graphene Institute

Graphene Suite - Live Presentation

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PARALLEL SESSIONS ONE & TWO

Parallel Session 1: Bio, Composites, Fundamentals - Theatre A 14.00 - 14.20 Melanie Kucki, Empa, Switzerland Graphene-related materials @ human intestinal barrier model in vitro 14.20 - 14.40 Wayne Yang, McGill University, Canada Observation of Au-nanoparticles undergoing Brownian motion in a Graphene wet cell via scanning electron microscopy 14.40 - 15.00 Antoine Reserbat-Plantey, ICFO - Institute for Photonic Sciences, Spain Graphene hybrid near-field optomechanics 15.00 - 15.20 COFFEE BREAK, SPONSORED BY GRAPHENE NANOTECH 15.20 - 15.40 Ian Kinloch, University of Manchester, UK Establishing the optimal graphene flake morphology for mechanical reinforcement in polymer nanocomposites 15.40 - 16.00 Nicolas Decorde, University of Cambridge, UK 3D printing of graphene-polymer composites 16.00 - 16.20 Aleix G. Guell, University of Warwick, UK Spatially resolved electrochemistry at Graphene: Basal Plane vs. Step Edges 16.20 - 16.40 Oleg Kolosov, Lancaster University, UK Exploring buried interfaces and nanoelectromechanical devices in 2D materials effects of elastic anisotropy 16.40 - 17.00 Esteban Climent, CMM-CSIC, Spain Brillouin spectroscopy of graphene oxide few-layer films: elastic constants and correlations with interlayer stacking and bonding 17.00 - 17.20 Otakar Frank, AS CR, v.v.i. Prague, Czech Republic Strain engineering in monolayer MoS2 and WS2 through direct out-of-plane compression Parallel Session 2: Opto-electronics, High-frequency, Fundamentals - Theatre B 14.00 - 14.20 Freddie Withers, University of Manchester, UK Light-emitting diodes by band-structure engineering in van der Waals heterostructures 14.20 - 14.40 M. Massicotte, CFO, Spain Picosecond photo-detection response time in Graphene-TMD-Graphene heterostructures 14.40 - 15.00 Anna Eiden, University of Cambridge, UK High responsivity silicon-graphene schottky avalanche photodetectors for visible and telecom wavelengths 15.00 - 15.20 COFFEE BREAK / EXHIBITION 15.20 - 15.40 Vito Sorianello, CNIT-Laboratory of Photonic Networks, Italy SOI phase modulation with graphene 15.40 - 16.00 Stefan Schwarz, University of Sheffield, UK Strong exciton-photon coupling in van der Waals heterostructures

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16.00 - 16.20 Ilya Goykhman, University of Cambridge, UK High responsivity graphene/MoS2 flexible photodetectors 16.20 - 16.40 Jean-Marie Poumirol, Geneva University, Switzerland Terahertz magneto-absorption and Faraday rotation in electrostatically controlled graphene and graphene anti-dot 16.40 - 17.00 Paolo Pedrinazzi, Politecnico di Milano, Italy Ultra-low contact resistance in graphene devices 17.00 - 17.20 Paola Barbara, Georgetown University, US Nanostructured graphene for terahertz bolometric detectors FRINGE SESSION, THEATRE A

17.30 - 18.30 GRAPHENE IN NATURE JOURNALS: MEET THE EDITORS BY NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP POSTER SESSION

1. Rickard Frost, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden

Graphene oxide induced rupture of liposomes: A matter of size and charge 2. Yong-Jin Kim, Univ of Manchester, UK

Non-destructive electron microscopic imaging and analysis of biological specimens with graphene coating

3. Nicolas Reckinger, Univ of Namur, Belgium Assessment of the antibacterial activity of graphene coating metallic substrates

4. Irina Barbolina, University of Manchester, UK How antibacterial graphene oxide is

5. Catriona Mccallion, University of Manchester, UK Exfoliating graphene using amino acids for use in therapeutics delivery

6. Aravind Vijayraghavan, University of Manchester, UK Graphene oxide selectively targets cancer stem cells across multiple tumor types: Implications for non-toxic cancer therapy

7. Mattia Bramini, ITT, Italy Towards graphene for biomedical applications: evaluation of graphene neuronal biocompatibility

8. Chandan Singh, CSIR-National Physical Laboratory, India Protein conjugated green Pd@rGO nanomat for bacterial cell detection

9. Leon Newman, University of Manchester, UK Environmental remediation of oxidised graphene nanocarbons: 2D sheets degrade faster than 1D tubular-shaped structures

10. Dhifaf Jasim, University of Manchester, UK Thickness of graphene oxide sheets determines their tissue distribution and urinary excretion in mice

11. Sangmin Kang, Seoul National University, Korea Graphene-based heaters for winter sports wear and their physiological evaluation

12. Baekwon Park, Seoul National University, Korea Enhanced catalytic activity of doped graphene for wastewater treatment.

13. Sourav Prasanna Mukherjee, Karolinska Institutet, Sweden Carbon-based nanomaterials trigger pro-inflammatory IL-1 cytokine production in primary human monocyte-derived macrophages

14. Amel Sbartai, institut de la vision, Paris France Surface modification of a neural sensor using graphene

15. Mi Zhou, University of Manchester, UK

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Graphene oxide can act as a growth factor delivery carrier to promote chondrogenic differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells in type 1 collagen hydrogels

16. Jacek Wychowaniec, University of Manchester, UK Graphene Oxide nanofiller for self-assembled peptide hydrogels

17. Je Min Yoo, Seoul National University, Korea Highly efficient nucleic acid drug delivery by graphene oxides

18. Benjamin Weise, RWTH Aachen University, Germany Melt-spinning and characterisation of graphene-modified polymeric fibres

19. Yosra Toumia, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy Graphene functionalized PVA microbubbles as contrast agent for photoacoustic imaging

20. Garlof Svenja, Technical University Hamburg-Harburg, Germany A comparative study on fracture toughness and failure mechanisms of graphene and graphite aerogel (Aerographite) based epoxy nanocomposites

21. Shaojun Qi, University of Birmingham, UK Graphene-based coatings on 316L steel for tribological and anti-corrosion applications

22. Beatriz Alonso, Graphenea, Spain Graphene in a range of composite materials

23. Cristina Valles, University of Manchester, UK Effect of the C/O ratio in thermally reduced graphene oxide materials on the reinforcement of epoxy nanocomposites

24. Mark Schlechtendahl, FMF - Freiburger Materialforschungszentrum, Germany Functionalized graphene as highly versatile carbon nanofiller for SEBS and SBR composites

25. G. Anagnostopoulos, University of Patras, Greece Mechanical performance of a prototype graphene/PET display

26. G. Anagnostopoulos, University of Patras, Greece Mechanical Performance of CVD graphene/polymer systems for electronic applications

27. Siti Rohana Binti Ahmad, University of Manchester, UK Deformation of Polypropylene Graphene Nanoplatelet Composites studied using Raman Spectroscopy.

28. Yogendra Mishra, University of Kiel, Germany Universal templates for creating highly porous graphene, graphite or carbon nanotubes based 3D hybrid nano-networks

29. Tobias Stauber, Spanish National Research Council, Spain Extraordinary absorption in decorated undoped graphene

30. Francesco Bisio, CNR, Italy Plasmonic response of composite graphene-Au nanopatterned systems

31. Nick Clark, University of Manchester, UK Graphene integrated with silicon waveguides: a route to sensing

32. Wei-Hua Wang, Academia Sinica, Taiwan Photovoltaic effect of MoS2 junction phototransistors

33. Sergey Mikhailov, University of Augsburg, Germany Third harmonic generation and saturable absorption in graphene

34. Jannatul Susoma, Aalto University, Finland Second and third harmonic generation in few-layer gallium telluride by multiphoton microscopy

35. Hartmut Roskos, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt, Germany Experimental study of a split-ring-resonator metamaterial fabricated from single-layer graphene

36. Christoph Neumann, RWTH Aachen University, Germany Controllable local photo-induced doping of graphene encapsulated in hexagonal boron nitride

37. Iacopo Torre, Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa, Italy Electrical plasmon detection in graphene waveguides

38. Andrea Tomadin, NEST, Istituto Nanoscienze-CNR and Scuola Normale Superiore, Italy

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Polaritons and the quasiparticle spectral function of graphene on hyperbolic crystals 39. Nojoon Myoung, University of Ioannina, Greece

Modeling of surface plasmon enhanced graphene photodetectors with highly-doped silicon gratings

40. Jamie Williams, University of Leicester, UK Bilayer Graphene as a novel single photon counting Optical and IR photodetector

41. Thomas Folland, University of Manchester, UK Graphene controlled switching of THz Lasers

42. Michele Tamagnone, EPFL, Switzerland Evaluation of graphene for terahertz reflectarray antennas

43. Dimitrios Konios, Technological Educational Institute (TEI) of Crete, Greece Reduced graphene oxide micromesh electrodes for large area, flexible, organic photovoltaic devices

44. Pedro Orellana, Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María, Chile Fullerene physisorption in graphene and graphene nanoribbons

45. Sofia Evanfelou, University of Ioannina, Greece Modeling plasmon-enhanced VIS-MIR graphene photodetectors

46. Alkmini Dagkli, University of Ioannina, Greece Modeling of enhanced absorption in graphene caused by plasmonic near fields

47. Deniz Keçik, Bilkent University, Turkey Layer and strain dependent optical properties of hexagonal AlN

48. Dmitry Svintsov, Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Russia Surface plasmon amplification in van der Waals heterostructures

49. Igor Gayduchenko, Moscow State Pedagogical University, Russia Response of asymmetric carbon nanodevices exposed to THz radiation

50. Naoko Inoue, University of Tokyo, Japan Cyclotron resonance in high mobility h-BN/graphene/h-BNquantum hall systems

51. David Jiménez, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain On the graphene-semiconductor junction: electrostatics and carrier transport

52. Alberto Hernández-Mínguez, Paul-Drude-Institut für Festkörperelektronik, Berlin Germany Generation of high-frequency surface acoustic waves on gated graphene

53. Gregory Auton, University of Manchester, UK Graphene based ballistic nanostructures for rectification

54. Hartmut Roskos, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt, Germany Terahertz detection with graphene field-effect transistors

55. Insu Jo, Seoul National Univ., Korea Vapor phase molecular n-Doping of graphene by ethyleneamines

56. Peter Bøggild, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark Optical mapping of conductivity, scattering time and carrier mobility of large area graphene

57. Wolfgang Mertin, Universität Duisburg-Essen, Germany Process residues in graphene transistors probed by Kelvin probe force microscopy

58. Michael Winters, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Self-switching diodes in H-intercalated epitaxial graphene

59. E.M Pechlivani, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece A comprehensive study of graphene from growth to fabrication of hybrid graphene-based electrodes for OPVs

60. Vladimir Ermolov, VTT Technical Research Center of Finland High frequency transmission properties of printed graphene

61. Kirill Arapov, Eindhoven University of Technology, UK Graphene conductors on flexible substrates

62. Joanna Jagiello, Institute of Electronic Materials Technology, Poland

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Optimization of the reduction of graphene oxide printed on polyester foil 63. Pawel Kowalczyk, University of Lodz, Poland

The reduction of inkjet-printed graphene oxide: the final step for production of transparent and flexible electronics

64. Yuna Kim, Seoul National University, Korea Graphene-enhanced conductivity and shape modulation of ionic hydrogel

65. Robert Young, Univ of Manchester, UK The deformation of wrinkled graphene

66. John Parthenios, FORTH/ICE-HT, Greece Hierarchical wrinkling of CVD graphene onto PET substrates

67. Felice Torrisi, Univ of Cambridge, UK Stretchable, transparent and conductive graphene film

68. Vittorio Morandi, CNR - IMM Section of Bologna, Italy Transparent conducting graphene electrodes for photovoltaic applications

69. Torben Winzer, TU Berlin, Germany Ultrafast photoluminescence from photoexcited graphene

70. Maxim Trushin, University of Konstanz, Germany Momentum resolved optical pump-probe spectroscopy in graphene

71. Charalampos Androulidakis, FORTH/ICEHT, Greece Compression behaviour of embedded graphene of various thicknesses

72. Miguel Moreno Ugeda, University of California at Berkeley, US Giant bandgap renormalization and excitonic effects in a monolayer transition metal dichalcogenide semiconductor

73. Ching Yuan Su, National Central University, Taiwan The charge transfer doping of graphene anode for high performance organic light emitting diodes

74. Amalia Patane, The University of Nottingham, UK Physics and applications of van der Waals InSe nanosheets

75. Jong Tae Lim, Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute, Korea High-quality Uniform Dry Transfer of Top Multilayered Graphene Electrode to Create Transparent Organic Light-emitting Diodes

76. Suk-Ho Choi, Kyung Hee University, Korea Plasmon-coupled enhancement of luminescence from AuCl3-doped graphene/ZnO films for various doping concentrations

77. Sung Kim, Kyung Hee University, Korea Photodetection by using heterostructures of graphene/silicon quantum dots

78. Tim Echtermeyer, Univ of Manchester, UK Surface plasmon polariton graphene photodetectors and sensors

79. Stefan Goodwin, Univ of Manchester, UK Studying the interaction of phospholipids with graphene materials using a quartz crystal microbalance

80. Amani Chrouda, institut des sciences analytiques, France Acetylcholinesterase-based graphene oxide biosensor for determination of aflatoxin B1

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SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME – FRIDAY, 26 JUNE 2015 08.30 - 14.00 THE REGISTRATION / HELPDESK IS OPEN, the Drum 08.40 - 12.30 PLENARY SESSION, Theatre B 12.30 - 13.30 CLOSING CEREMONY, Theatre B 12.30 - 14.00 LUNCH BOX, Eats Restaurant

PLENARY SESSION, THEATRE B

08.40 - 09.15 Liming Dai Functionalized graphene for advanced energy conversion and storage 09.15 - 09.50 Hyung Gyu Park Ultimate mass permeation across two-dimensional porous Graphene 09.50 - 10.25 Marcelo Lozada-Hidalgo Proton transport through one-atom-thick-crystals 10.25 - 10.45 COFFEE BREAK 10.45 - 11.20 Cecilia Mattevi Graphene multifunctional three-dimensional structures 11.20 - 11.55 Wencai Ren Graphene materials: controlled synthesis and applications 11.55 - 12.30 Steven Brems The road to high quality graphene transferred to a Si wafer: issues and considerations