Observation of one-dimensional ballistic valley transport in the curved boundary of bilayer graphene

POSTER

Abstract

Bilayer graphene is a two-layered hexagonal crystal of carbon atoms that shows novel and interesting valley-based phenomena. The manipulation of the valley degree of freedom in graphene have been proposed by different methods such as by exploiting topological confined zero-mode states at domain walls or by creating graphene nanoribbons with zig-zag boundaries. Future dissipationless valleytronic devices require absence of short range disorder, in order to achieve a ballistic valley transport, and it is desirable that they have a channel with atomic width dimensions. In this work we show strong evidences that a ballistic valley conduction may be achieved in a one-dimensional channel formed along the curved boundary of a folded bilayer graphene. In our high quality devices of graphene encapsulated in between h-BN crystals, we measured a ballistic conductance near of G=4e2/h with zero-magnetic fields. We envision that such new ultra-thin valleytronic platform could either be exploit as a novel dissipationless electronic quantum device as well could let to the discovery of novel exciting properties of matter, such as graphene-based superconducting effects.

*FAPEMIG, CAPES, CNPQ, INCT/Nanocarbono and Pós-graduação em Física da UFMG.

Presenters

  • Edrian Mania

    • Physics Department, Institute of Exact Sciences - UFMG

Authors

  • Edrian Mania

    • Physics Department, Institute of Exact Sciences - UFMG
  • Alisson Cadore

    • Physics Department, Institute of Exact Sciences - UFMG
    • Physics, Univ Fed de Minas Gerais
  • Kenji Watanabe

    • National Institute for Materials Science
    • NIMS
    • National Institute for Material Science
    • Advanced Materials Laboratory, National Institute for Materials Science
    • National Institute of Materials Science
    • Research Center for Functional Materials, National Institute for Materials Science
    • National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS
    • Advanced Materials Laboratory, NIMS
    • National Institute for Materials Science, Advanced Materials Laboratory
    • National Institue for Materials Science
    • National Institute of Material Science
    • National Institute for Matericals Science
    • Advanced Materials Laboratory
    • National Institute for Materials Science, 1-1 Namiki
    • Advanced materials laboratory, National institute for Materials Science
    • NIMS-Japan
  • Takashi Taniguchi

    • National Institute for Materials Science
    • NIMS
    • National Institute for Material Science
    • Advanced Materials Laboratory, National Institute for Materials Science
    • National Institute of Materials Science
    • Research Center for Functional Materials, National Institute for Materials Science
    • National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS
    • Advanced Materials Laboratory, NIMS
    • National Institute for Materials Science, Advanced Materials Laboratory
    • National Institue for Materials Science
    • National Institute of Material Science
    • National Institute for Matericals Science
    • Advanced Materials Laboratory
    • National Institute for Materials Science, 1-1 Namiki
    • NIMS-Japan
  • Leonardo Campos

    • Physics Department, Institute of Exact Sciences - UFMG
    • Physics, Univ Fed de Minas Gerais