What actually is the Dirac Point ?

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The "Dirac Point" refers to specific points in the electronic band structure of graphene where the conduction and valence bands meet, resulting in a zero gap semiconductor behavior. These points are characterized by a linear energy-momentum relationship, allowing electrons and holes to behave as relativistic particles known as Dirac fermions. The Dirac points are located at the corners of the two-dimensional hexagonal Brillouin zone, specifically at points K and K'. It is important to distinguish between the Dirac points and their crystallographic counterparts, as they can shift under certain conditions. Understanding these concepts is crucial for exploring the unique electronic properties of graphene.
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What actually is the "Dirac Point"?

I'm trying to find out what actually is the "Dirac Point"?!

I've Googled it and searched around on the internet, looked through books, but haven't actually been able to find a definitive definition and explanation, just general references to it within the context.

 
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All I know is that it has to do with Graphene. I don't have the exact definition. :rolleyes:
 


From wikipedia's article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphene#Electronic_properties

Graphene differs from most conventional three-dimensional materials. Intrinsic graphene is a semi-metal or zero-gap semiconductor. Understanding the electronic structure of graphene is the starting point for finding the band structure of graphite. It was realized as early as 1947 by P. R. Wallace[72] that the E-k relation is linear for low energies near the six corners of the two-dimensional hexagonal Brillouin zone, leading to zero effective mass for electrons and holes. [73] Due to this linear (or “conical") dispersion relation at low energies, electrons and holes near these six points, two of which are inequivalent, behave like relativistic particles described by the Dirac equation for spin 1/2 particles.[74][75] Hence, the electrons and holes are called Dirac fermions, and the six corners of the Brillouin zone are called the Dirac points.
 


Drakkith said:

i think it's better to refer to the RMP paper writtern by M.O. Goerbig (2011), who says:

Although they (Dirac points) are situated at the same position in the first BZ, it is useful to make a clear conceptual distinction between the Dirac points D and D', which are defined as the contact points between the two bands, andthe crystallographic points K and K', which are defined as the corners of the first BZ. There are indeed situations where the Dirac points move away from the points K and K'.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
I am attempting to use a Raman TruScan with a 785 nm laser to read a material for identification purposes. The material causes too much fluorescence and doesn’t not produce a good signal. However another lab is able to produce a good signal consistently using the same Raman model and sample material. What would be the reason for the different results between instruments?

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