Correlated insulating and superconducting states in twisted bilayer graphene below the magic angle
Author(s) -
Emilio Codecido,
Qiyue Wang,
Ryan Koester,
Shi Che,
Haidong Tian,
Rui Lv,
Son Tran,
Kenji Watanabe,
Takashi Taniguchi,
Fan Zhang,
Marc Bockrath,
Chun Ning Lau
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aaw9770
Subject(s) - bilayer graphene , superconductivity , graphene , magic angle , condensed matter physics , materials science , magic (telescope) , range (aeronautics) , bilayer , nanotechnology , physics , chemistry , nuclear magnetic resonance , quantum mechanics , composite material , membrane , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , biochemistry
Two graphene layers twisted at 0.93° host superconducting and correlated insulating states, expanding the “magic” range of angles. The emergence of flat bands and correlated behaviors in “magic angle” twisted bilayer graphene (tBLG) has sparked tremendous interest, though its many aspects are under intense debate. Here we report observation of both superconductivity and the Mott-like insulating state in a tBLG device with a twist angle of ~0.93°, which is smaller than the magic angle by 15%. At an electron concentration of ±5 electrons/moiré unit cell, we observe a narrow resistance peak with an activation energy gap ~0.1 meV. This indicates additional correlated insulating state, and is consistent with theory predicting a high-energy flat band. At doping of ±12 electrons/moiré unit cell we observe resistance peaks arising from the Dirac points in the spectrum. Our results reveal that the “magic” range of tBLG is in fact larger than what is previously expected, and provide a wealth of new information to help decipher the strongly correlated phenomena observed in tBLG.
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