Magnetism and correlations in fractionally filled degenerate shells of graphene quantum dots
A. D. Guclu, P. Potasz, O. Voznyy, M. Korkusinski, P. Hawrylak

TL;DR
This paper investigates how electron-electron interactions influence the magnetic and electronic properties of triangular graphene quantum dots with degenerate zero-energy shells, revealing complex correlation effects and spin phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive multi-method approach to study correlations in graphene quantum dots, highlighting the impact of fractional shell filling on ground state magnetism and excitation spectra.
Findings
Half-filled shells lead to full spin polarization.
Adding a single electron destroys magnetic order.
Spin blockade can occur due to ground state depolarization.
Abstract
When an electron is confined to a triangular atomic thick layer of graphene [1-5] with zig-zag edges, its energy spectrum collapses to a shell of degenerate states at the Fermi level (Dirac point) [6-9]. The degeneracy is proportional to the edge size and can be made macroscopic. This opens up the possibility to design a strongly correlated electronic system as a function of fractional filling of the zero-energy shell, in analogy to the fractional quantum Hall effect in a quasi-two-dimensional electron gas[10], but without the need for a high magnetic field. In this work we show that electronic correlations, beyond the Hubbard model[6,7] and mean-field density functional theory (DFT) [7,8] play a crucial role in determining the nature of the ground state and the excitation spectrum of triangular graphene quantum dots as a function of dot size and filling fraction of the shell of…
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