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Detecting Symmetry Breaking in Magic Angle Graphene Using Scanning Tunneling Microscopy

Jung Pyo Hong, Tomohiro Soejima, Michael P. Zaletel

2022Physical Review Letters41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A growing body of experimental work suggests that magic angle twisted bilayer graphene exhibits a "cascade" of spontaneous symmetry-breaking transitions, sparking interest in the potential relationship between symmetry breaking and superconductivity. However, it has proven difficult to find experimental probes which can unambiguously identify the nature of the symmetry breaking. Here, we show how atomically resolved scanning tunneling microscopy can be used as a fingerprint of symmetry-breaking order. By analyzing the pattern of sublattice polarization and "Kekulé" distortions in small magnetic fields, order parameters for each of the most competitive symmetry-breaking states can be identified. In particular, we show that the "Kramers intervalley coherent state," which theoretical work predicts to be the ground state at even integer fillings, shows a Kekulé distortion which emerges only in a magnetic field.

Topics & Concepts

Symmetry breakingPhysicsScanning tunneling microscopeCondensed matter physicsSpontaneous symmetry breakingBilayer grapheneSuperconductivityMagic angleQuantum tunnellingExplicit symmetry breakingGrapheneQuantum mechanicsSpectral lineQuantum and electron transport phenomenaGraphene research and applicationsTopological Materials and Phenomena
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