30 research outputs found
Single-layer behavior and slow carrier density dynamic of twisted graphene bilayer
We report scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and spectroscopy (STS) of
twisted graphene bilayer on SiC substrate. For twist angle ~ 4.5o the Dirac
point ED is located about 0.40 eV below the Fermi level EF due to the electron
doping at the graphene/SiC interface. We observed an unexpected result that the
local Dirac point around a nanoscaled defect shifts towards the Fermi energy
during the STS measurements (with a time scale about 100 seconds). This
behavior was attributed to the decoupling between the twisted graphene and the
substrate during the measurements, which lowers the carrier density of graphene
simultaneously
Enhanced Intervalley Scattering of Twisted Bilayer Graphene by Periodic AB Stacked Atoms
The electronic properties of twisted bilayer graphene on SiC substrate were
studied via combination of transport measurements and scanning tunneling
microscopy. We report the observation of enhanced intervalley scattering from
one Dirac cone to the other, which contributes to weak localization, of the
twisted bilayer graphene by increasing the interlayer coupling strength. Our
experiment and analysis demonstrate that the enhanced intervalley scattering is
closely related to the periodic AB stacked atoms (the A atom of layer 1 and the
B atom of layer 2 that have the same horizontal positions) that break the
sublattice degeneracy of graphene locally. We further show that these periodic
AB stacked atoms affect intervalley but not intravalley scattering. The result
reported here provides an effective way to atomically manipulate the
intervalley scattering of graphene.Comment: 4figure
Electronic Structures of Graphene Layers on Metal Foil: Effect of Point Defects
Here we report a facile method to generate a high density of point defects in
graphene on metal foil and show how the point defects affect the electronic
structures of graphene layers. Our scanning tunneling microscopy (STM)
measurements, complemented by first principle calculations, reveal that the
point defects result in both the intervalley and intravalley scattering of
graphene. The Fermi velocity is reduced in the vicinity area of the defect due
to the enhanced scattering. Additionally, our analysis further points out that
periodic point defects can tailor the electronic properties of graphene by
introducing a significant bandgap, which opens an avenue towards all-graphene
electronics.Comment: 4 figure
Strain Induced One-Dimensional Landau-Level Quantization in Corrugated Graphene
Theoretical research has predicted that ripples of graphene generates
effective gauge field on its low energy electronic structure and could lead to
zero-energy flat bands, which are the analog of Landau levels in real magnetic
fields. Here we demonstrate, using a combination of scanning tunneling
microscopy and tight-binding approximation, that the zero-energy Landau levels
with vanishing Fermi velocities will form when the effective pseudomagnetic
flux per ripple is larger than the flux quantum. Our analysis indicates that
the effective gauge field of the ripples results in zero-energy flat bands in
one direction but not in another. The Fermi velocities in the perpendicular
direction of the ripples are not renormalized at all. The condition to generate
the ripples is also discussed according to classical thin-film elasticity
theory.Comment: 4 figures, Phys. Rev.
Atomic resolution imaging of the two-component Dirac-Landau levels in a gapped graphene monolayer
The wavefunction of massless Dirac fermions is a two-component spinor. In
graphene, a one-atom-thick film showing two-dimensional Dirac-like electronic
excitations, the two-component representation reflects the amplitude of the
electron wavefunction on the A and B sublattices. This unique property provides
unprecedented opportunities to image the two components of massless Dirac
fermions spatially. Here we report atomic resolution imaging of the
two-component Dirac-Landau levels in a gapped graphene monolayer by scanning
tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy. A gap of about 20 meV, driven by
inversion symmetry breaking by the substrate potential, is observed in the
graphene on both SiC and graphite substrates. Such a gap splits the n = 0
Landau level (LL) into two levels, 0+ and 0-. We demonstrate that the amplitude
of the wavefunction of the 0- LL is mainly at the A sites and that of the 0+ LL
is mainly at the B sites of graphene, characterizing the internal structure of
the spinor of the n = 0 LL. This provides direct evidence of the two-component
nature of massless Dirac fermions.Comment: 4 Figures in main text and 4 Figures in S