Hierarchy of Hofstadter states and replica quantum Hall ferromagnetism in graphene superlattices

Self-similarity and fractals have fascinated researchers across various disciplines. In graphene placed on boron nitride and subjected to a magnetic field, self-similarity appears in the form of numerous replicas of the original Dirac spectrum, and their quantization gives rise to a fractal pattern...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature physics 2014-07, Vol.10 (7), p.525-529
Hauptverfasser: Yu, G. L., Gorbachev, R. V., Tu, J. S., Kretinin, A. V., Cao, Y., Jalil, R., Withers, F., Ponomarenko, L. A., Piot, B. A., Potemski, M., Elias, D. C., Chen, X., Watanabe, K., Taniguchi, T., Grigorieva, I. V., Novoselov, K. S., Fal’ko, V. I., Geim, A. K., Mishchenko, A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Self-similarity and fractals have fascinated researchers across various disciplines. In graphene placed on boron nitride and subjected to a magnetic field, self-similarity appears in the form of numerous replicas of the original Dirac spectrum, and their quantization gives rise to a fractal pattern of Landau levels, referred to as the Hofstadter butterfly. Here we employ capacitance spectroscopy to probe directly the density of states (DoS) and energy gaps in this spectrum. Without a magnetic field, replica spectra are seen as pronounced DoS minima surrounded by van Hove singularities. The Hofstadter butterfly shows up as recurring Landau fan diagrams in high fields. Electron–electron interactions add another twist to the self-similar behaviour. We observe suppression of quantum Hall ferromagnetism, a reverse Stoner transition at commensurable fluxes and additional ferromagnetism within replica spectra. The strength and variety of the interaction effects indicate a large playground to study many-body physics in fractal Dirac systems. Graphene on boron nitride gives rise to a moiré superlattice displaying the Hofstadter butterfly: a fractal dependence of energy bands on external magnetic fields. Now, by means of capacitance spectroscopy, further aspects of this system are revealed—most notably, suppression of quantum Hall antiferromagnetism at particular commensurate magnetic fluxes.
ISSN:1745-2473
1745-2481
1476-4636
DOI:10.1038/nphys2979