Strain and curvature induced evolution of electronic band structures in twisted graphene bilayer

It is well established that strain and geometry could affect the band structure of graphene monolayer dramatically. Here we study the evolution of local electronic properties of a twisted graphene bilayer induced by a strain and a high curvature, which are found to strongly affect the local band str...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2013-07, Vol.4 (1), p.2159-2159, Article 2159
Hauptverfasser: Yan, Wei, He, Wen-Yu, Chu, Zhao-Dong, Liu, Mengxi, Meng, Lan, Dou, Rui-Fen, Zhang, Yanfeng, Liu, Zhongfan, Nie, Jia-Cai, He, Lin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:It is well established that strain and geometry could affect the band structure of graphene monolayer dramatically. Here we study the evolution of local electronic properties of a twisted graphene bilayer induced by a strain and a high curvature, which are found to strongly affect the local band structures of the twisted graphene bilayer. The energy difference of the two low-energy van Hove singularities decreases with increasing lattice deformation and the states condensed into well-defined pseudo-Landau levels, which mimic the quantization of massive chiral fermions in a magnetic field of about 100 T, along a graphene wrinkle. The joint effect of strain and out-of-plane distortion in the graphene wrinkle also results in a valley polarization with a significant gap. These results suggest that strained graphene bilayer could be an ideal platform to realize the high-temperature zero-field quantum valley Hall effect. The electronic properties of graphene are known to be sensitive to strain and geometry. Yan et al. find that the introduction of strain and high curvature to bilayer graphene strongly affects the electronic landscape, resulting in changes in the band structure.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms3159