We present a microscopic theory to give a physical picture of the formation
of quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) effect in graphene due to a joint effect of
Rashba spin-orbit coupling λR and exchange field M. Based on a
continuum model at valley K or K′, we show that there exist two distinct
physical origins of QAH effect at two different limits. For M/λR≫1,
the quantization of Hall conductance in the absence of Landau-level
quantization can be regarded as a summation of the topological charges carried
by Skyrmions from real spin textures and Merons from \emph{AB} sublattice
pseudo-spin textures; while for λR/M≫1, the four-band low-energy
model Hamiltonian is reduced to a two-band extended Haldane's model, giving
rise to a nonzero Chern number C=1 at either K or K′. In the
presence of staggered \emph{AB} sublattice potential U, a topological phase
transition occurs at U=M from a QAH phase to a quantum valley-Hall phase. We
further find that the band gap responses at K and K′ are different when
λR, M, and U are simultaneously considered. We also show that the
QAH phase is robust against weak intrinsic spin-orbit coupling λSO,
and it transitions a trivial phase when
λSO>(M2+λR2+M)/2. Moreover, we use a tight-binding
model to reproduce the ab-initio method obtained band structures through doping
magnetic atoms on 3×3 and 4×4 supercells of graphene, and explain
the physical mechanisms of opening a nontrivial bulk gap to realize the QAH
effect in different supercells of graphene.Comment: 10pages, ten figure