Broken-Symmetry States in Doubly Gated Suspended Bilayer Graphene
2010; American Association for the Advancement of Science; Volume: 330; Issue: 6005 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1126/science.1194988
ISSN1095-9203
AutoresR. Thomas Weitz, Monica Allen, Benjamin E. Feldman, Jens Martin, Amir Yacoby,
Tópico(s)Advancements in Battery Materials
ResumoThe non-interacting energy spectrum of graphene and its bilayer counterpart consists of multiple degeneracies owing to the inherent spin, valley and layer symmetries. Interactions among charge carriers are expected to spontaneously break these symmetries, leading to gapped ordered states. In the quantum Hall regime these states are predicted to be ferromagnetic in nature whereby the system becomes spin polarized, layer polarized or both. In bilayer graphene, due to its parabolic dispersion, interaction-induced symmetry breaking is already expected at zero magnetic field. In this work, the underlying order of the various broken-symmetry states is investigated in bilayer graphene that is suspended between top and bottom gate electrodes. By controllably breaking the spin and sublattice symmetries we are able to deduce the order parameter of the various quantum Hall ferromagnetic states. At small carrier densities, we identify for the first time three distinct broken symmetry states, one of which is consistent with either spontaneously broken time-reversal symmetry or spontaneously broken rotational symmetry.
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