Moir\'e Commensurability and the Quantum Anomalous Hall Effect in Twisted Bilayer Graphene on Hexagonal Boron Nitride
Jingtian Shi, Jihang Zhu, A.H. MacDonald

TL;DR
This paper proposes that the quantum anomalous Hall effect in twisted bilayer graphene on hBN depends on the commensurability of moiré patterns, influencing the topological properties and explaining experimental variability.
Contribution
It introduces a theory linking moiré pattern commensurability to the occurrence of the QAH effect in twisted bilayer graphene on hBN, highlighting the role of supermoiré structures.
Findings
Commensurate moiré patterns enable topologically non-trivial phases.
QAH effect is favored near commensurate twist angles.
Disorder from incommensurability can suppress the QAH effect.
Abstract
The quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) effect is sometimes observed in twisted bilayer graphene (tBG) when it is nearly aligned with an encapsulating hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) layer. We propose that the appearance or absence of the QAH effect in individual devices could be related to commensurability between the graphene/graphene and graphene/hBN moir\'e patterns. We identify a series of points in the twist-angle space at which the two moir\'e patterns are commensurate, allowing moir\'e band theory to be applied, and show that the band Chern numbers are in this case sensitive to a rigid in-plane hBN displacement. Given this property, we argue that the QAH effect is likely only when i) the twist-angle-pair is close enough to a commensurate point that the two moir\'e patterns yield a supermoir\'e pattern with a…
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