Hofstadter subband ferromagnetism and symmetry broken Chern insulators in twisted bilayer graphene
Yu Saito, Jingyuan Ge, Louk Rademaker, Kenji Watanabe, Takashi, Taniguchi, Dmitry A. Abanin, Andrea F. Young

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that twisted bilayer graphene under low magnetic fields hosts a cascade of ferromagnetic Chern insulators with topologically nontrivial subbands, driven by strong Coulomb interactions and moire superlattice effects.
Contribution
It reveals the emergence of ferromagnetic Chern insulators in tBLG at low magnetic fields and explains their origin through Hofstadter butterfly subband structures and strong interactions.
Findings
Observation of Chern insulators with |C|=1,2,3 in tBLG at low B
Identification of Coulomb interactions dominating Hofstadter subbands
First-order phase transition to ferromagnetic state at B=0 for C=3
Abstract
In bilayer graphene rotationally faulted to theta=1.1 degrees, interlayer tunneling and rotational misalignment conspire to create a pair of low energy flat band that have been found to host various correlated phenomena at partial filling. Most work to date has focused on the zero magnetic field phase diagram, with magnetic field (B) used as a probe of the B=0 band structure. Here, we show that twisted bilayer graphene (tBLG) in a B as low as 2T hosts a cascade of ferromagnetic Chern insulators with Chern number |C|=1,2 and 3. We argue that the emergence of the Chern insulators is driven by the interplay of the moire superlattice with the B, which endow the flat bands with a substructure of topologically nontrivial subbands characteristic of the Hofstadter butterfly. The new phases can be accounted for in a Stoner picture in which exchange interactions favor polarization into one or…
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