We report a change of three orders of magnitudes in the resistance of a
suspended bilayer graphene flake which varies from a few kΩs in the high
carrier density regime to several MΩs around the charge neutrality point
(CNP). The corresponding transport gap is 8 meV at 0.3 K. The sequence of
appearing quantum Hall plateaus at filling factor ν=2 followed by ν=1
suggests that the observed gap is caused by the symmetry breaking of the lowest
Landau level. Investigation of the gap in a tilted magnetic field indicates
that the resistance at the CNP shows a weak linear decrease for increasing
total magnetic field. Those observations are in agreement with a spontaneous
valley splitting at zero magnetic field followed by splitting of the spins
originating from different valleys with increasing magnetic field. Both, the
transport gap and B field response point toward spin polarized layer
antiferromagnetic state as a ground state in the bilayer graphene sample. The
observed non-trivial dependence of the gap value on the normal component of B
suggests possible exchange mechanisms in the system.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure