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Direct Imaging of the Energy Bands of Magic Angle Twisted Bilayer Graphene with the Quantum Twisting Microscope - Part II

ORAL

Abstract

One of the core mysteries of magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene (MATBG) lies in understanding the nature of its interacting energy bands. While MATBG has shown topological phenomena, explained by topological Chern bands in momentum space, its electronic behavior also displayed localized characteristics, hinting at a real-space picture. This dichotomy has led to various theoretical models, including the topological heavy fermion model and the Mott semimetal framework, each attempting to reconcile how these contrasting features emerge within the flat bands of MATBG.

Until now, no tool has been capable of imaging these energy bands at low temperatures and with high enough energy and momentum resolution to resolve these puzzles. Recently, we developed the Quantum Twisting Microscope (QTM), which utilizes momentum-resolved tunneling at a twisting van der Waals interface to directly map the energy bands of quantum materials. Until now, however, our measurements of electronic bands have been at room temperature.

In this talk, I will present the first cryogenic measurements of the MATBG bands. Part II of this talk will focus on the interacting bands at the magic angle.

Publication: 1. Inbar, A. et al. The quantum twisting microscope. Nature 614, 682–687 (2023)<br>2. J. Birkbeck. et al. Measuring phonon dispersion and electron-phason coupling in twisted bilayer graphene with a cryogenic quantum twisting microscope, arXiv:2407.13404 (2024).

Presenters

  • John Birkbeck

    Weizmann Institute of Science

Authors

  • John Birkbeck

    Weizmann Institute of Science

  • Alon Inbar

    Weizmann Institute of Science

  • Jiewen Xiao

    Weizmann Institute of Science

  • Shahal Ilani

    Weizmann Institute of Science