4.8 Article

Competing ordered states with filling factor two in bilayer graphene

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 5, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5550

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Department of Energy (DOE) Basic Energy Science (BES) Division [ER 46940-DE-SC0010597]
  2. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) [SPAWAR N66001-11-1-4110]
  3. Welch Foundation [TBF1473]
  4. DOE Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering [DE-FG03-02ER45958]
  5. Center of Nanoscale Electronics, Phenomena and Technology (CONSEPT) Center at UCR
  6. DMEA [H94003-10-2-1003]
  7. NSF [DMR/1106358]
  8. ONR
  9. Function Accelerated nano Material Engineering (FAME) Center
  10. MARCO
  11. DARPA
  12. State of Florida
  13. DOE
  14. [NSF/DMR-0654118]

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The quantum Hall effect, in which a two-dimensional sample's Hall conductivities become quantized, is a remarkable transport anomaly commonly observed at strong magnetic fields. However, it may also appear at zero magnetic field if time-reversal symmetry is broken. Charge-neutral bilayer graphene is unstable to a variety of competing and closely related broken symmetry states, some of which have non-zero quantized Hall conductivities. Here we explore those states by stabilizing them with external fields. Transport spectroscopy measurements reveal two distinct states that have two quantum units of Hall conductivity, stabilized by large magnetic and electric fields, respectively. The majority spins of both phases form a quantum anomalous Hall state, and the minority spins constitute a Kekulestate with spontaneous valley coherence for phase I and a quantum valley Hall state for phase II. Our results shed light on the rich set of competing ordered states in bilayer graphene.

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