“…A gap can be induced by the lateral confinement in narrow ribbons with a transverse size of a few nanometers or of tens of nanometers, which can be efficiently modeled with atomistic techniques, such as tight-binding approaches. Fabrication of such nanowires is, however, very challenging, and therefore also alternative and/or complementary approaches to open up a gap are being pursued, such as the usage of bilayer graphene [5][6][7][8], of chemical functionalization [9][10][11][12], and of doping [13][14][15][16]. Large graphene devices (with a size of several hundreds of nanometers or of microns) can, however, be convenient (or mandatory) in radio-frequency or sensor applications, which do not necessarily require an energy gap [17][18][19][20][21][22].…”