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Long-range ballistic transport of Brown-Zak fermions in graphene superlattices

ORAL

Abstract

In quantising magnetic fields, graphene superlattices exhibit a complex fractal spectrum often referred to as the Hofstadter butterfly. It can be viewed as a collection of Landau levels that arise from quantization of Brown-Zak minibands recurring at rational (p/q) fractions of the magnetic flux quantum per superlattice unit cell. We show that, in graphene-on-boron-nitride superlattices, Brown-Zak fermions can exhibit mobilities above 106 cm2/Vs and the mean free path exceeding several micrometres. The exceptional quality allows us to show that Brown-Zak minibands are 4q times degenerate and all the degeneracies (spin, valley and mini-valley) can be lifted by exchange interactions below 1K. We also found negative bend resistance for Brown-Zak fermions at 1/q fractions for electrical probes placed as far as several micrometres apart. The latter observation highlights the fact that Brown-Zak fermions are Bloch quasiparticles propagating in high magnetic fields along straight trajectories, just like electrons in zero field. In some parts of the Hofstadter spectrum, Landau levels exhibit nonlinear and staircase-like features that cannot be explained within a single-particle picture.

Presenters

  • Julien Barrier

    Univ of Manchester

Authors

  • Julien Barrier

    Univ of Manchester

  • Piranavan Kumaravadivel

    School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Manchester, Univ of Manchester

  • Vladimir Falko

    National Graphene Institute, Henry Royce Institute for Advanced Materials, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Manchester, National Graphene Institute, Univ of Manchester, School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Manchester, Manchester University, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Manchester, National Graphene Institute, University of Manchester, University of Manchester, Physics and Astronomy, National Graphene Institute, the University of Manchester, UK

  • Andre Geim

    Univ of Manchester, School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Manchester, School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Manchester, Manchester M139PL, United Kingdom

  • Alexey Berdyugin

    School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Manchester, Manchester University, Univ of Manchester