Electric-field-tunable electronic nematic order in twisted double-bilayer graphene
Rhine Samajdar, Mathias S. Scheurer, Simon Turkel, Carmen, Rubio-Verd\'u, Abhay N. Pasupathy, J\"orn W. F. Venderbos, and Rafael M., Fernandes

TL;DR
This paper investigates the electronic nematic order in twisted double-bilayer graphene, revealing its structure, origin at the moiré scale, and how an external electric field can control its orientation, with implications for tunable electronic phases.
Contribution
It provides a symmetry-based analysis combined with a microscopic model to understand nematic order and demonstrates electric-field control of its orientation in tDBG.
Findings
Nematic order mainly arises from moiré scale states.
External electric field can rotate the nematic director.
Predicted experimental signatures in STM and transport.
Abstract
Graphene-based moir\'{e} systems have attracted considerable interest in recent years as they display a remarkable variety of correlated phenomena. Besides insulating and superconducting phases in the vicinity of integer fillings of the moir\'{e} unit cell, there is growing evidence for electronic nematic order both in twisted bilayer graphene and twisted double-bilayer graphene (tDBG), as signaled by the spontaneous breaking of the threefold rotational symmetry of the moir\'{e} superlattices. Here, we combine symmetry-based analysis with a microscopic continuum model to investigate the structure of the nematic phase of tDBG and its experimental manifestations. First, we perform a detailed comparison between the theoretically calculated local density of states and recent scanning tunneling microscopy data [arXiv:2009.11645] to resolve the internal structure of the nematic order…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
