Electronic structure of turbostratic graphene
Abstract
We explore the rotational degree of freedom between graphene layers via the simple prototype of the graphene twist bilayer, i.e., two layers rotated by some angle θ. It is shown that, due to the weak interaction between graphene layers, many features of this system can be understood by interference conditions between the quantum states of the two layers, mathematically expressed as Diophantine problems. Based on this general analysis we demonstrate that while the Dirac cones from each layer are always effectively degenerate, the Fermi velocity vF of the Dirac cones decreases as θ 0; the form we derive for vF(θ) agrees with that found via a continuum approximation in Phys. Rev. Lett., 99:256802, 2007. From tight binding calculations for structures with 1.47 θ < 30 we find agreement with this formula for θ 5. In contrast, for θ 5 this formula breaks down and the Dirac bands become strongly warped as the limit θ 0 is approached. For an ideal system of twisted layers the limit as θ0 is singular as for θ > 0 the Dirac point is fourfold degenerate, while at θ=0 one has the twofold degeneracy of the AB stacked bilayer. Interestingly, in this limit the electronic properties are in an essential way determined globally, in contrast to the 'nearsightedness' [W. Kohn. Phys. Rev. Lett., 76:3168, 1996.] of electronic structure generally found in condensed matter.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.