Effective mass in bilayer graphene at low carrier densities: The role of potential disorder and electron-electron interaction

In a two-dimensional electron gas, the electron-electron interaction generally becomes stronger at lower carrier densities and renormalizes the Fermi-liquid parameters, such as the effective mass of carriers. We combine experiment and theory to study the effective masses of electrons and holes me* a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical review. B 2016-10, Vol.94 (16), p.161406(R), Article 161406
Hauptverfasser: Li, J., Tan, L. Z., Zou, K., Stabile, A. A., Seiwell, D. J., Watanabe, K., Taniguchi, T., Louie, Steven G., Zhu, J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In a two-dimensional electron gas, the electron-electron interaction generally becomes stronger at lower carrier densities and renormalizes the Fermi-liquid parameters, such as the effective mass of carriers. We combine experiment and theory to study the effective masses of electrons and holes me* and mh* in bilayer graphene in the low carrier density regime on the order of 1×1011cm−2. Measurements use temperature-dependent low-field Shubnikov–de Haas oscillations observed in high-mobility hexagonal boron nitride supported samples. We find that while me* follows a tight-binding description in the whole density range, mh* starts to drop rapidly below the tight-binding description at a carrier density of n=6×1011cm−2 and exhibits a strong suppression of 30% when n reaches 2×1011cm−2. Contributions from the electron-electron interaction alone, evaluated using several different approximations, cannot explain the experimental trend. Instead, the effect of the potential fluctuation and the resulting electron-hole puddles play a crucial role. Calculations including both the electron-electron interaction and disorder effects explain the experimental data qualitatively and quantitatively. This Rapid Communication reveals an unusual disorder effect unique to two-dimensional semimetallic systems.
ISSN:2469-9950
2469-9969
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevB.94.161406