# High-temperature probe of electron compressibility via asymmetric Coulomb drag

**Authors:** Yingjia Liu, Kaining Yang, Hanwen Wang, Qin Zhang, Hongpeng Liu, Kenji Watanabe, Takashi Taniguchi, Wencai Ren, Zheng Vitto Han, Siwen Zhao

PMC · DOI: 10.1038/s41467-026-69086-9 · 2026-02-05

## TL;DR

Researchers used Coulomb drag in a layered system to study graphene's electronic compressibility at high temperatures, revealing quantum effects missed by traditional methods.

## Contribution

Asymmetric Coulomb drag is introduced as a novel method to probe electronic compressibility in 2D systems at high temperatures.

## Key findings

- Coulomb drag reveals graphene's compressibility oscillations at high temperatures where standard transport is insensitive.
- MoS2 acts as a transducer for graphene's Landau-level physics in magnetic fields.
- Quantum oscillations in compressibility are detected via drag even when graphene's transport shows no features.

## Abstract

Lateral charge transport of a two-dimensional (2D) electronic system can be much influenced by feeding a current into another closely spaced 2D conductor, known as the Coulomb drag phenomenon – a powerful probe of electron-electron interactions and collective excitations. Here, we show that Coulomb drag in a deliberately asymmetric van der Waals bilayer can serve as a layer-selective probe of electronic compressibility that remains invisible to standard transport. We devise a MoS2/graphene double layer with large disparity in effective mass and Fermi temperature between them, separated by a ~ 3 nm hexagonal boron nitride spacer, and operate in the degenerate Fermi liquid regime. The MoS2 drag channel exhibits constant electronic compressibility and acts as a sensitive transducer of graphene’s Landau-level physics at finite magnetic fields. At elevated temperatures and moderate magnetic fields, clear Shubnikov-de Haas-like behaviour in the drag signal tracks the quantum oscillation in compressibility of graphene even when its own magnetotransport remains essentially featureless under the same conditions. Our results establish asymmetric Coulomb drag as a compressibility spectroscopy for 2D systems, enabling access to quantum phenomena that may leave only weak, or even negligible, fingerprints in transport.

The electron-electron interactions between carriers of adjacent 2D electronic systems can influence their transport properties and generate a Coulomb drag effect. Here, the authors show that Coulomb drag can be used as a probe of the electronic compressibility of graphene at high temperatures, where conventional magnetotransport measurements are not as sensitive.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** graphene (MESH:D006108), hexagonal boron nitride (MESH:C017282), MoS2 (MESH:C082964)

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12982821/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12982821