Formation of the n = 0 Landau level in hybrid graphene

ORAL

Abstract

The minimum of 4-terminal conductance occurring at its charge neutral point has proven to be a robust empirical feature of graphene, persisting with changes to temperature, applied magnetic field, substrate, and layer thickness, though the theoretical mechanisms involved in transport about this point – vanishing density of states, conventional band gap opening, and broken symmetry quantum Hall mobility gaps, and hydrodynamic flow – vary widely depending on the regime. Here we report on observations of a regime where the 4-terminal conductance minimum ceases to exist: transport in monolayer graphene connected to bilayer graphene during the onset of the quantum Hall effect. As monolayer and bilayer graphene have distinct zero-energy Landau levels that form about the charge neutral point, our observations suggest that competitions between the differing many-body orderings of these states as they emerge may underlie this anomalous conductance.

Presenters

  • Paul Cadden-Zimansky

    Bard Coll, Physics Program, Bard College, Physics, Bard College, Bard College

Authors

  • Paul Cadden-Zimansky

    Bard Coll, Physics Program, Bard College, Physics, Bard College, Bard College

  • Min Kyung Shinn

    Department of Physics, Washington University

  • Gavin Myers

    Physics Program, Bard College

  • Matt Dalrymple

    Physics Program, Bard College

  • Henry Travaglini

    Department of Physics, UC Davis