4.8 Article

Mapping the twist-angle disorder and Landau levels in magic-angle graphene

Journal

NATURE
Volume 581, Issue 7806, Pages 47-+

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2255-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Sagol WIS-MIT Bridge Program
  2. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [785971]
  3. Israel Science Foundation (ISF) [994/19]
  4. Minerva Foundation
  5. Federal German Ministry of Education and Research
  6. Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust [2018PG-ISL006]
  7. MISTI (MIT International Science and Technology Initiatives) MIT-Israel Seed Fund
  8. National Science Foundation (NSF) [DMR-1809802]
  9. Center for Integrated Quantum Materials under NSF [DMR-1231319]
  10. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation's EPiQS Initiative [GBMF4541]
  11. National Science Foundation [1541959]
  12. Fundacio Bancaria `la Caixa' [LCF/BQ/AN15/10380011]
  13. US Army Research Office [W911NF-17-S-0001]
  14. JSPS KAKENHI [JP17K05496]
  15. Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality [19ZR1436400]
  16. NYU-ECNU Institute of Physics at NYU Shanghai and New York University Global Seed Grants for Collaborative Research
  17. National Science Foundation of China [11750110420]
  18. Elemental Strategy Initiative
  19. A3 Foresight by JSPS [JPMJCR15F3]
  20. JST
  21. European Research Council (ERC) [785971] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The recently discovered flat electronic bands and strongly correlated and superconducting phases in magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene (MATBG)(1,2) crucially depend on the interlayer twist angle, theta. Although control of the global theta with a precision of about 0.1 degrees has been demonstrated(1-7), little information is available on the distribution of the local twist angles. Here we use a nanoscale on-tip scanning superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID-on-tip)(8) to obtain tomographic images of the Landau levels in the quantum Hall state(9) and to map the local theta variations in hexagonal boron nitride (hBN)-encapsulated MATBG devices with relative precision better than 0.002 degrees and a spatial resolution of a few moire periods. We find a correlation between the degree of theta disorder and the quality of the MATBG transport characteristics and show that even state-of-the-art devices-which exhibit correlated states, Landau fans and superconductivity-display considerable local variation in theta of up to 0.1 degrees, exhibiting substantial gradients and networks of jumps, and may contain areas with no local MATBG behaviour. We observe that the correlated states in MATBG are particularly fragile with respect to the twist-angle disorder. We also show that the gradients of theta generate large gate-tunable in-plane electric fields, unscreened even in the metallic regions, which profoundly alter the quantum Hall state by forming edge channels in the bulk of the sample and may affect the phase diagram of the correlated and superconducting states. We thus establish the importance of theta disorder as an unconventional type of disorder enabling the use of twist-angle gradients for bandstructure engineering, for realization of correlated phenomena and for gate-tunable built-in planar electric fields for device applications. SQUID-on-tip tomographic imaging of Landau levels in magic-angle graphene provides nanoscale maps of local twist-angle disorder and shows that its properties are fundamentally different from common types of disorder.

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