| Literature DB >> 29915054 |
Wei Yao1,2, Eryin Wang1,2, Changhua Bao1,2, Yiou Zhang3, Kenan Zhang1,2, Kejie Bao3, Chun Kai Chan3, Chaoyu Chen4, Jose Avila4, Maria C Asensio4,5, Junyi Zhu6, Shuyun Zhou7,2,8.
Abstract
The interlayer coupling can be used to engineer the electronic structure of van der Waals heterostructures (superlattices) to obtain properties that are not possible in a single material. So far research in heterostructures has been focused on commensurate superlattices with a long-ranged Moiré period. Incommensurate heterostructures with rotational symmetry but not translational symmetry (in analogy to quasicrystals) are not only rare in nature, but also the interlayer interaction has often been assumed to be negligible due to the lack of phase coherence. Here we report the successful growth of quasicrystalline 30° twisted bilayer graphene (30°-tBLG), which is stabilized by the Pt(111) substrate, and reveal its electronic structure. The 30°-tBLG is confirmed by low energy electron diffraction and the intervalley double-resonance Raman mode at 1383 cm-1 Moreover, the emergence of mirrored Dirac cones inside the Brillouin zone of each graphene layer and a gap opening at the zone boundary suggest that these two graphene layers are coupled via a generalized Umklapp scattering mechanism-that is, scattering of a Dirac cone in one graphene layer by the reciprocal lattice vector of the other graphene layer. Our work highlights the important role of interlayer coupling in incommensurate quasicrystalline superlattices, thereby extending band structure engineering to incommensurate superstructures.Entities:
Keywords: NanoARPES; band structure engineering; incommensurate heterostructure; quasicrystalline 30°-tBLG; twisted bilayer graphene
Year: 2018 PMID: 29915054 PMCID: PMC6142217 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1720865115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205