A group of
researchers led by Sir Andre Geim and Dr. Alexey Berdyugin at The University of
Manchester have discovered and characterized a new family of quasiparticles
named 'Brown-Zak fermions' in graphene-based superlattices.
The team
achieved this breakthrough by aligning the atomic lattice of a graphene layer
to that of an insulating boron nitride sheet, dramatically changing the
properties of the graphene sheet.
The study
follows years of successive advances in graphene-boron nitride superlattices
which allowed the observation of a fractal pattern known as the Hofstadter's
butterfly—and today (Friday, November 13) the researchers report another highly
surprising behavior of particles in such structures under applied magnetic
field.
"It
is well known, that in zero magnetic field, electrons move in straight
trajectories and if you apply a magnetic field they start to bend and move in
circles", explain Julien Barrier and Dr. Piranavan Kumaravadivel, who carried
out the experimental work.
"In a
graphene layer which has been aligned with the boron nitride, electrons also
start to bend—but if you set the magnetic field at specific values, the
electrons move in straight line trajectories again, as if there is no magnetic
field anymore!"
"Such
behavior is radically different from textbook physics." adds Dr. Piranavan
Kumaravadivel.
"We
attribute this fascinating behavior to the formation of novel quasiparticles at
high magnetic field," says Dr. Alexey Berdyugin. "Those
quasiparticles have their own unique properties and exceptionally high mobility
despite the extremely high magnetic field."
As
published in Nature Communications, the work describes how electrons behave in
an ultra-high-quality superlattice of graphene with a revised framework for the
fractal features of the Hofstadter's butterfly. Fundamental improvements in
graphene device fabrication and measurement techniques in the past decade have
made this work possible.
"The
concept of quasiparticles is arguably one of the most important in condensed
matter physics and quantum many-body systems. It was introduced by the
theoretical physicist Lev Landau in the 1940s to depict collective effects as a
'one particle excitation'," explains Julien Barrier "They are used in
a number of complex systems to account for many-body effects."
Until now,
the behavior of collective electrons in graphene superlattices were thought in
terms of the Dirac fermion, a quasiparticle that has unique properties
resembling photons (particles with no mass), that replicate at high magnetic
fields. However, this did not account for some experimental features, like the
additional degeneracy of the states, nor did it match the finite mass of the
quasiparticle in this state.
The
authors propose 'Brown-Zak fermions' to be the family of quasiparticles
existing in superlattices under high magnetic field. This is characterized by a
new quantum number that can directly be measured. Interestingly, working at
lower temperatures allowed them to lift the degeneracy with exchange
interactions at ultra-low temperatures.
"Under
the presence of a magnetic field, electrons in graphene start rotating with
quantised orbits. For Brown-Zak fermions, we managed to restore a straight
trajectory of tens of micrometers under high magnetic fields up to 16T (500,000
times earth's magnetic field). Under specific conditions, the ballistic
quasiparticles feel no effective magnetic field," explain Dr.
Kumaravadivel and Dr. Berdyugin.
In an
electronic system, the mobility is defined as the capacity for a particle to
travel upon the application of an electrical current. High mobilities have long
been the Holy Grail when fabricating 2-D systems such as graphene because such
materials would present additional properties (integer and fractional quantum
hall effects), and potentially allow the creation of ultra-high frequency
transistors, the components at the heart of a computer processor.
"For
this study we prepared graphene devices that are extra-large with a very high level
of purity". says Dr. Kumaravadivel. This allowed us to achieve mobilities
of several millions of cm²/Vs, which means particles would travel straight
across the entire device without scattering. Importantly, this was not only the
case for classical Dirac fermions in graphene, but also realized for the
Brown-Zak fermions reported in the work.
These
Brown-Zak fermions define new metallic states, that are generic to any
superlattice system, not just graphene and offers a playground for new
condensed matter physics problems in other 2-D material based superlattices.
Julien
Barrier added "The findings are important, of course for fundamental
studies in electron transport, but we believe that understanding quasiparticles
in novel superlattice devices under high magnetic fields can lead to the
development of new electronic devices."
The
high mobility means that a transistor made from such a device could operate at
higher frequencies, allowing a processor made out of this material to perform
more calculations per unit of time, resulting in a faster computer. Applying a
magnetic field would usually scale down the mobility and make such a device
unusable for certain applications. The high mobilities of Brown-Zak fermions at
high magnetic fields open a new perspective for electronic devices operating
under extreme conditions.