| Literature DB >> 33947845 |
Canxun Zhang1,2,3, Tiancong Zhu1,2, Salman Kahn1,2, Shaowei Li1,2,3, Birui Yang1, Charlotte Herbig1, Xuehao Wu1, Hongyuan Li1,2, Kenji Watanabe4, Takashi Taniguchi5, Stefano Cabrini6, Alex Zettl1,2,3, Michael P Zaletel7,8, Feng Wang9,10,11, Michael F Crommie12,13,14.
Abstract
The discovery of interaction-driven insulating and superconducting phases in moiré van der Waals heterostructures has sparked considerable interest in understanding the novel correlated physics of these systems. While a significant number of studies have focused on twisted bilayer graphene, correlated insulating states and a superconductivity-like transition up to 12 K have been reported in recent transport measurements of twisted double bilayer graphene. Here we present a scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy study of gate-tunable twisted double bilayer graphene devices. We observe splitting of the van Hove singularity peak by ~20 meV at half-filling of the conduction flat band, with a corresponding reduction of the local density of states at the Fermi level. By mapping the tunneling differential conductance we show that this correlated system exhibits energetically split states that are spatially delocalized throughout the different regions in the moiré unit cell, inconsistent with order originating solely from onsite Coulomb repulsion within strongly-localized orbitals. We have performed self-consistent Hartree-Fock calculations that suggest exchange-driven spontaneous symmetry breaking in the degenerate conduction flat band is the origin of the observed correlated state. Our results provide new insight into the nature of electron-electron interactions in twisted double bilayer graphene and related moiré systems.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33947845 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-22711-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919