Signatures of Fractional Quantum Anomalous Hall States in Twisted MoTe2 Bilayer
Jiaqi Cai, Eric Anderson, Chong Wang, Xiaowei Zhang, Xiaoyu Liu,, William Holtzmann, Yinong Zhang, Fengren Fan, Takashi Taniguchi, Kenji, Watanabe, Ying Ran, Ting Cao, Liang Fu, Di Xiao, Wang Yao, Xiaodong Xu

TL;DR
This paper reports experimental evidence of fractional quantum anomalous Hall states in twisted MoTe2 bilayers, demonstrating fractional and integer topological states driven by electron interactions in moiré superlattices.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental signatures of FQAH states in twisted MoTe2 bilayers, highlighting their potential for exploring fractional excitations and topological quantum computation.
Findings
Observation of fractional Hall conductance at -2/3 and -3/5 filling factors.
Detection of a Chern number -1 state consistent with QAH.
Electrical tuning can switch topological states to trivial.
Abstract
The interplay between spontaneous symmetry breaking and topology can result in exotic quantum states of matter. A celebrated example is the quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) state, which exhibits an integer quantum Hall effect at zero magnetic field thanks to its intrinsic ferromagnetism. In the presence of strong electron-electron interactions, exotic fractional-QAH (FQAH) states at zero magnetic field can emerge. These states could host fractional excitations, including non-Abelian anyons - crucial building blocks for topological quantum computation. Flat Chern bands are widely considered as a desirable venue to realize the FQAH state. For this purpose, twisted transition metal dichalcogenide homobilayers in rhombohedral stacking have recently been predicted to be a promising material platform. Here, we report experimental signatures of FQAH states in 3.7-degree twisted MoTe2 bilayer.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Graphene research and applications · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
