4.8 Article

Signatures of fractional quantum anomalous Hall states in twisted MoTe2

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NATURE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06289

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This study reports experimental evidence of the fractional quantum anomalous Hall (FQAH) states in a twisted molybdenum ditelluride (MoTe2) bilayer. Magnetic circular dichroism measurements reveal robust ferromagnetic states at fractionally hole-filled moire minibands. Landau fan diagram obtained through trion photoluminescence measurements matches the predicted dispersion of FQAH states with fractionally quantized Hall conductance values.
The interplay between spontaneous symmetry breaking and topology can result in exotic quantum states of matter. A celebrated example is the quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) state, which exhibits an integer quantum Hall effect at zero magnetic field owing to intrinsic ferromagnetism(1-3). In the presence of strong electron- electron interactions, fractional QAH (FQAH) states at zero magnetic field can emerge(4-8). These states could host fractional excitations, including non-Abelian anyons-crucial building blocks for topological quantum computation9. Here we report experimental signatures of FQAH states in a twisted molybdenum ditelluride (MoTe2) bilayer. Magnetic circular dichroism measurements reveal robust ferromagnetic states at fractionally hole-filled moire minibands. Using trion photoluminescence as a sensor(10), we obtain a Landau fan diagram showing linear shifts in carrier densities corresponding to filling factor v = -2/3 and v = -3/5 ferromagnetic states with applied magnetic field. These shifts match the Streda formula dispersion of FQAH states with fractionally quantized Hall conductance of sigma(xy)= - 2/3 e(2)/h and sigma(xy)= - 3/5 e(2)/h, respectively. Moreover, the v = -1 state exhibits a dispersion corresponding to Chern number -1, consistent with the predicted QAH state(11-14). In comparison, several non-ferromagnetic states on the electron-doping side do not disperse, that is, they are trivial correlated insulators. The observed topological states can be electrically driven into topologically trivial states. Our findings provide evidence of the long-sought FQAH states, demonstrating MoTe2 moire superlattices as a platform for exploring fractional excitations.

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