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Moireless Correlations in ABCA Graphene
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Atomically thin van der Waals materials stacked with an interlayer twist have proven to be an excellent platform toward achieving gate-tunable correlated phenomena linked to the formation of flat electronic bands. In this work we demonstrate the formation of emergent correlated phases in multilayer rhombohedral graphene-a simple material that also exhibits a flat electronic band edge but without the need of having a moire superlattice induced by twisted van der Waals layers. We show that two layers of bilayer graphene that are twisted by an arbitrary tiny angle host large (micrometer-scale) regions of uniform rhombohedral four-layer (ABCA) graphene that can be independently studied. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy reveals that ABCA graphene hosts an unprecedentedly sharp van Hove singularity of 3-5-meV half-width. We demonstrate that when this van Hove singularity straddles the Fermi level, a correlated many-body gap emerges with peak-to-peak value of 9.5 meV at charge neutrality. Mean-field theoretical calculations for model with short-ranged interactions indicate that two primary candidates for the appearance of this broken symmetry state are a charge-transfer excitonic insulator and a ferrimagnet. Finally, we show that ABCA graphene hosts surface topological helical edge states at natural interfaces with ABAB graphene which can be turned on and off with gate voltage, implying that small-angle twisted double-bilayer graphene is an ideal programmable topological quantum material
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Notes :
- This work was supported by Programmable Quantum Materials, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences, under Award DE-SC0019443. STM equipment support was provided by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research via Grant FA9550-16-1-0601 and by the Office of Naval Research via Grant N00014-17-1-2967. C.R.-V. acknowledges funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under Marie Sklodowska Curie Grant Agreement 844271. L.X. and A.R. acknowledge funding from the European Research Council (ERC-2015-AdG694097), Cluster of Excellence Advanced Imaging of Matter EXC 2056 -390715994 and RTG 2247 by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation), SFB925 and Grupos Consolidados (IT1249-19). The Flatiron Institute is a division of the Simons Foundation. We acknowledge support from the Max Planck-New York City Center for Non-Equilibrium Quantum Phenomena. D.M.K. acknowledges funding from the DFG under Germany's Excellence Strategy - Cluster of Excellence Matter and Light for Quantum Computing (ML4Q) EXC 2004/1 -390534769 and within the Priority Program SPP 2244 "2DMP." D.N.B. is Moore Investigator in Quantum Materials EPIQS #94553. D.H. was supported by a grant from the Simons Foundation (579913), English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1256624002
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource