Osaka Prefectural Toyonaka Support School
ORCID: 0000-0002-5911-7532Publishes on Graphene research and applications, Quantum and electron transport phenomena, Topological Materials and Phenomena. 275 papers and 14.1k citations.
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van der Waals heterostructures constitute a new class of artificial materials formed by stacking atomically thin planar crystals. We demonstrated band structure engineering in a van der Waals heterostructure composed of a monolayer graphene flake coupled to a rotationally aligned hexagonal boron nitride substrate. The spatially varying interlayer atomic registry results in both a local breaking of the carbon sublattice symmetry and a long-range moiré superlattice potential in the graphene. In our samples, this interplay between short- and long-wavelength effects resulted in a band structure described by isolated superlattice minibands and an unexpectedly large band gap at charge neutrality. This picture is confirmed by our observation of fractional quantum Hall states at ± 5/3 filling and features associated with the Hofstadter butterfly at ultrahigh magnetic fields.
We review the electronic properties of bilayer graphene, beginning with a description of the tight-binding model of bilayer graphene and the derivation of the effective Hamiltonian describing massive chiral quasiparticles in two parabolic bands at low energies. We take into account five tight-binding parameters of the Slonczewski–Weiss–McClure model of bulk graphite plus intra- and interlayer asymmetry between atomic sites which induce band gaps in the low-energy spectrum. The Hartree model of screening and band-gap opening due to interlayer asymmetry in the presence of external gates is presented. The tight-binding model is used to describe optical and transport properties including the integer quantum Hall effect, and we also discuss orbital magnetism, phonons and the influence of strain on electronic properties. We conclude with an overview of electronic interaction effects.
We theoretically study the lattice relaxation in the twisted bilayer graphene (TBG) and its effect on the electronic band structure. We develop an effective continuum theory to describe the lattice relaxation in general TBGs and obtain the optimized structure to minimize the total energy. At small rotation angles $<{2}^{\ensuremath{\circ}}$, in particular, we find that the relaxed lattice drastically reduces the area of the AA stacking region and forms a triangular domain structure with alternating AB and BA stacking regions. We then investigate the effect of the domain formation on the electronic band structure. The most notable change from the nonrelaxed model is that an energy gap of up to 20 meV opens at the superlattice subband edges on the electron and hole sides. We also find that the lattice relaxation significantly enhances the Fermi velocity, which was strongly suppressed in the nonrelaxed model.