Gate-Tunable Mott Insulator in Trilayer Graphene-Boron Nitride Moiré Superlattice
ORAL
Abstract
Mott insulator plays a central role in strongly correlated physics, where the repulsive Coulomb interaction dominates over the electron kinetic energy and leads to insulating states with one electron occupying each unit cell. A tunable Mott insulator, where the competition between the Coulomb interaction and the kinetic energy can be varied in situ, can provide an invaluable model system for the study of Mott physics. Here we report the realization of such a tunable Mott insulator in the ABC trilayer graphene (TLG) and hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) heterostructure with a Moiré superlattice. The Moiré superlattice in TLG/hBN heterostructures leads to narrow electronic minibands that are gate-tunable. The Mott insulator states emerge at 1/4 and 1/2 fillings, corresponding to one electron and two electrons per site, respectively. Moreover, the Mott states in the ABC TLG/hBN heterostructure exhibit unprecedented tunability: the Mott gap can be modulated in situ by a vertical electrical field, and at the meantime the electron doping can be gate-tuned to fill the band from one Mott insulating state to another. Our observation opens up tremendous opportunities to explore novel strongly correlated phenomena in two-dimensional Moiré superlattice heterostructures.
–
Presenters
-
Guorui Chen
- Physics, UC Berkeley
- Department of Physics, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94709, USA