Competing interlayer interactions in twisted monolayer-bilayer graphene: From spontaneous electric polarization to quasi-magic angle
Wei-En Tseng, Mei-Yin Chou

TL;DR
This paper investigates twisted monolayer-bilayer graphene's electronic properties, revealing competing interlayer interactions, spontaneous polarization, and a quasi-magic angle, offering insights into correlated electronic phenomena in moiré materials.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive first-principles and tight-binding analysis of aAB, highlighting the interplay of interlayer couplings and identifying a quasi-magic angle for strong correlations.
Findings
Spontaneous electric polarization splits parabolic bands at large twist angles.
Charge localization occurs in moiré potential at small twist angles.
Narrow bands at 1.16° suggest potential for correlated electronic states.
Abstract
The family of moir\'e materials provides a powerful platform for tuning interlayer couplings via the twist angle in systems with large spatial periodicity. In trilayer graphene systems, interlayer couplings at the two interfaces can possibly be tuned separately, and the competition between these interactions can therefore influence the electronic structure in a significant way. In this study, we investigate the electronic properties of twisted monolayer-bilayer graphene (aAB) beyond the continuum model, using first-principles calculations combined with an accurate tight-binding model. We find that at large twist angles, the electronic features of aAB are well described by the interaction between the parabolic bands of the Bernal AB-bilayer and the Dirac bands of the twisted monolayer, resulting in a spontaneous electric polarization in the former that splits the parabolic bands. As the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGraphene research and applications · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · ZnO doping and properties
