4.8 Article

Spectroscopic Evidence for a Spin- and Valley-Polarized Metallic State in a Nonmagic-Angle Twisted Bilayer Graphene

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 14, Issue 10, Pages 13081-13090

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c04631

Keywords

twisted bilayer graphene; moire superlattices; scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy; electron-electron correlations; spin and valley polarization

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11974050, 11674029, 12074031, 11674025, 11922401, 11774028, 11729402]
  2. National Program for Support of Top-notch Young Professionals
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
  4. Chang Jiang Scholars Program

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In the magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene (MA-TBG), strong electron electron (e-e) correlations caused by the band-flattening lead to many exotic quantum phases such as superconductivity, correlated insulator, ferromagnetism, and quantum anomalous Hall effects, when its low-energy van Hove singularities (VHSs) are partially filled. Here our high resolution scanning tunneling microscope and spectroscopy measurements demonstrate that the e-e correlation in a nonmagic-angle TBG with a twist angle theta = 1.49 degrees still plays an important role in determining its electronic properties. Our most interesting observation on that sample is when one of its VHSs is partially filled, the one associated peak in the spectrum splits into four peaks. Simultaneously, the spatial symmetry of electronic states around the split VHSs is broken by the e e correlation. Our analysis based on the continuum model suggests that such a one -to -four split of the VHS originates from the formation of an interaction -driven spin -valley-polarized metallic state near the VHS, which is a symmetry-breaking phase that has not been lidentified in the MA-TBG or lin other systems.

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