Bilayer silicene has richer physical properties than bilayer graphene due to
its buckled structure together with its trigonal symmetric structure. The
buckled structure arises from a large ionic radius of silicon, and the trigonal
symmetry from a particular way of hopping between two silicenes. It is a
topologically trivial insulator since it carries a trivial Z2
topological charge. Nevertheless, its physical properties are more akin to
those of a topological insulator than those of a band insulator. Indeed, a
bilayer silicene nanoribbon has edge modes which are almost gapless and
helical. We may call it a quasi-topological insulator. An important observation
is that the band structure is controllable by applying the electric field to a
bilayer silicene sheet. We investigate the energy spectrum of bilayer silicene
under electric field. Just as monolayer silicene undergoes a phase transition
from a topological insulator to a band insulator at a certain electric field,
bilayer silicene makes a transition from a quasi-topological insulator to a
band insulator beyond a certain critical field. Bilayer silicene is a metal
while monolayer silicene is a semimetal at the critical field. Furthermore we
find that there are several critical electric fields where the gap closes due
to the trigonal warping effect in bilayer silicene.Comment: 8 pages, 11 figures, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jp