Magic Angle Spectroscopy
Alexander Kerelsky, Leo McGilly, Dante M. Kennes, Lede Xian, Matthew, Yankowitz, Shaowen Chen, K. Watanabe, T. Taniguchi, James Hone, Cory Dean,, Angel Rubio, Abhay N. Pasupathy

TL;DR
This study uses STM/STS to map atomic-scale electronic and structural properties of twisted bilayer graphene near the magic angle, revealing key features of electron correlations and symmetry breaking linked to superconductivity.
Contribution
It provides detailed atomic-scale insights into the electronic spectrum and symmetry breaking in magic angle TBLG, supporting a correlation-driven pairing mechanism.
Findings
Two van Hove singularities decrease in separation near 1.1°
Correlation-induced gap of up to 7.5 meV observed near half band filling
C3 symmetry breaking suggests nematic electronic interactions
Abstract
The electronic properties of heterostructures of atomically-thin van der Waals (vdW) crystals can be modified substantially by Moir\'e superlattice potentials arising from an interlayer twist between crystals. Moir\'e-tuning of the band structure has led to the recent discovery of superconductivity and correlated insulating phases in twisted bilayer graphene (TBLG) near the so-called "magic angle" of 1.1{\deg}, with a phase diagram reminiscent of high T superconductors. However, lack of detailed understanding of the electronic spectrum and the atomic-scale influence of the Moir\'e pattern has so far precluded a coherent theoretical understanding of the correlated states. Here, we directly map the atomic-scale structural and electronic properties of TBLG near the magic angle using scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy (STM/STS). We observe two distinct van Hove…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGraphene research and applications · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Surface and Thin Film Phenomena
