Imaging flat band electron hydrodynamics in biased bilayer graphene
Canxun Zhang, Evgeny Redekop, Hari Stoyanov, Jack H. Farrell, Sunghoon Kim, Ludwig Holleis, David Gong, Aidan Keough, Youngjoon Choi, Takashi Taniguchi, Kenji Watanabe, Martin E. Huber, Ania C. Bleszynski Jayich, Andrew Lucas, and Andrea F. Young

TL;DR
This study visualizes and characterizes electron hydrodynamics in biased bilayer graphene, revealing flat band regimes with strong electron-electron interactions suitable for miniaturized devices.
Contribution
It demonstrates direct imaging of hydrodynamic electron flow in bilayer graphene and identifies flat band conditions with enhanced electron-electron interactions.
Findings
Hydrodynamic transport observed in flat band regime.
Electron-electron scattering length ~50 nm, comparable to Fermi wavelength.
Nonlinear flow patterns at high currents.
Abstract
Hydrodynamic electron transport arises when carrier kinetics are dominated by interelectron collisions rather than the relaxation of momentum out of the electron system. In recent years, signatures of electron hydrodynamics have been reported in graphene devices owing to the low disorder and weak electron-phonon coupling. However, these experiments have been performed in regimes where the carrier mass is light, and the electron-electron collision length--though smaller than corresponding lengths for phonon or impurity scattering--remains large in absolute terms, typically several hundred nanometers. This restricts hydrodynamic transport phenomena to large length scales, limiting miniaturization of devices based on hydrodynamic flow. The advent of dual-gated rhombohedral graphene multilayers introduces a new route toward enhanced hydrodynamic behavior via their large--and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGraphene research and applications · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Topological Materials and Phenomena
