87 research outputs found

    Ultrafast control of moir\'e pseudo-electromagnetic field in homobilayer semiconductors

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    In long-wavelength moir\'e patterns of homobilayer semiconductors, the layer pseudospin of electrons is subject to a sizable Zeeman field that is spatially modulated from the interlayer coupling in moir\'e. By interference of this spatial modulation with a homogeneous but dynamically tunable component from out-of-plane electric field, we show that the spatial-temporal profile of the overall Zeeman field therefore features a topological texture that can be controlled in an ultrafast timescale by a terahertz field or an interlayer bias. Such dynamical modulation leads to the emergence of an in-plane electric field for low energy carriers, which is related to their real space Berry curvature -- the moir\'e magnetic field -- through the Faraday's law of induction. These emergent electromagnetic fields, having opposite signs at the time reversal pair of valleys, can be exploited to manipulate valley and spin in the moir\'e landscape under the control by a bias pulse or a terahertz irradiation.Comment: To appear in Natural Science

    Local versus extended deformed graphene geometries for valley filtering

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    The existence of two-inequivalent valleys in the band structure of graphene has motivated the search of mechanisms that allow their separation and control for potential device applications. Among the several schemes proposed in the literature, strain-induced out-of-plane deformations (occurring naturally or intentionally designed in graphene samples), ranks among the best candidates to produce separation of valley currents. Because valley filtering properties in these structures is, however, highly dependent on the type of deformation and setups considered, it is important to identify the relevant factors determining optimal operation and detection of valley currents. In this paper we present a comprehensive comparison of two typical deformations commonly found in graphene samples: local centro-symmetric bubbles and extended folds/wrinkles. Using the Dirac model for graphene and the second-order Born approximation we characterize the scattering properties of the bubble deformation, while numerical transmission matrix methods are used for the fold-like deformations. In both cases, we obtain the dependence of valley polarization on the geometrical parameters of deformations, and discuss their possible experimental realizations. Our study reveals that extended deformations act as better valley filters in broader energy ranges and present more robust features against variations of geometrical parameters and incident current directions.Comment: 17 pages, 16 figures, figures were adjusted, added a few references, accepted by PR

    Topological flat bands in strained graphene: substrate engineering and optical control

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    The discovery of correlated phases in twisted moir\'e superlattices accelerated the search for low-dimensional materials with exotic properties. A promising approach uses engineered substrates to strain the material. However, designing substrates for tailored properties is hindered by the incomplete understanding of the relationship between substrate's shapes and electronic properties of the deposited materials. By analyzing effective models of graphene under periodic deformations with generic crystalline profiles, we identify strong C2zC_{2z} symmetry breaking as the critical substrate geometric feature for emerging energy gaps and quasi-flat bands. We find continuous strain profiles producing connected pseudo-magnetic field landscapes are important for band topology. We show that the resultant electronic and topological properties from a substrate can be controlled with circularly polarized light, which also offers unique signatures for identifying the band topology imprinted by strain. Our results can guide experiments on strain engineering for exploring interesting transport and topological phenomena.Comment: Title changed, second part replaced by new contents. Supporting information will be freely available from the website of Nano Letter

    Performance deterioration modeling and optimal preventive maintenance strategy under scheduled servicing subject to mission time

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    AbstractServicing is applied periodically in practice with the aim of restoring the system state and prolonging the lifetime. It is generally seen as an imperfect maintenance action which has a chief influence on the maintenance strategy. In order to model the maintenance effect of servicing, this study analyzes the deterioration characteristics of system under scheduled servicing. And then the deterioration model is established from the failure mechanism by compound Poisson process. On the basis of the system damage value and failure mechanism, the failure rate refresh factor is proposed to describe the maintenance effect of servicing. A maintenance strategy is developed which combines the benefits of scheduled servicing and preventive maintenance. Then the optimization model is given to determine the optimal servicing period and preventive maintenance time, with an objective to minimize the system expected life-cycle cost per unit time and a constraint on system survival probability for the duration of mission time. Subject to mission time, it can control the ability of accomplishing the mission at any time so as to ensure the high dependability. An example of water pump rotor relating to scheduled servicing is introduced to illustrate the failure rate refresh factor and the proposed maintenance strategy. Compared with traditional methods, the numerical results show that the failure rate refresh factor can describe the maintenance effect of servicing more intuitively and objectively. It also demonstrates that this maintenance strategy can prolong the lifetime, reduce the total lifetime maintenance cost and guarantee the dependability of system

    Interlayer electric multipoles induced by in-plane field from quantum geometric origins

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    We show that interlayer charge transfer in 2D materials can be driven by an in-plane electric field, giving rise to electrical multipole generation in linear and second order of in-plane field. The linear and nonlinear effects have quantum geometric origins in the Berry curvature and quantum metric respectively, defined in extended parameter spaces characteristic of layered materials. We elucidate their symmetry characters, and demonstrate sizable dipole and quadrupole polarizations respectively in twisted bilayers and trilayers of transition metal dichalcogenides. Furthermore, we show that the effect is strongly enhanced during the topological phase transition tuned by interlayer translation. The effects point to a new electric control on layer quantum degree of freedom.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure

    Time-Reversal Even Charge Hall Effect from Twisted Interface Coupling

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    Under time-reversal symmetry, a linear charge Hall response is usually deemed to be forbidden by the Onsager relation. In this work, we discover a scenario for realizing a time-reversal even linear charge Hall effect in a non-isolated two-dimensional crystal allowed by time reversal symmetry. The restriction by Onsager relation is lifted by interfacial coupling with an adjacent layer, where the overall chiral symmetry requirement is fulfilled by a twisted stacking. We reveal the underlying band geometric quantity as the momentum-space vorticity of layer current. The effect is demonstrated in twisted bilayer graphene and twisted homobilayer transition metal dichalcogenides with a wide range of twist angles, which exhibit giant Hall ratios under experimentally practical conditions, with gate voltage controlled on-off switch. This work reveals intriguing Hall physics in chiral structures, and opens up a research direction of layertronics that exploits the quantum nature of layer degree of freedom to uncover exciting effects.Comment: Supplementary Information included. To appear in Nature Communication

    Sublattice symmetry breaking and Kondo-effect enhancement in strained graphene

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    Kondo physics in doped monolayer graphene is predicted to exhibit unusual features due to the linear vanishing of the pristine material's density of states at the Dirac point. Despite several attempts, conclusive experimental observation of the phenomenon remains elusive. One likely obstacle to identification is a very small Kondo temperature scale TKT_K in situations where the chemical potential lies near the Dirac point. We propose tailored mechanical deformations of monolayer graphene as a means of revealing unique fingerprints of the Kondo effect. Inhomogeneous strains are known to produce specific alternating changes in the local density of states (LDOS) away from the Dirac point that signal sublattice symmetry breaking effects. Small LDOS changes can be amplified in an exponential increase or decrease of TKT_K for magnetic impurities attached at different locations. We illustrate this behavior in two deformation geometries: a circular 'bubble' and a long fold, both described by Gaussian displacement profiles. We calculate the LDOS changes for modest strains and analyze the relevant Anderson impurity model describing a magnetic atom adsorbed in either a 'top-site' or a 'hollow-site' configuration. Numerical renormalization-group solutions of the impurity model suggest that higher expected TKT_K values, combined with distinctive spatial patterns under variation of the point of graphene attachment, make the top-site configuration the more promising for experimental observation of signatures of the Kondo effect. The strong strain sensitivity of TKT_K may lift top-site Kondo physics into the range experimentally accessible using local probes such as scanning tunneling microscopy.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures (added Figs. 6 and 7 to version 1
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