Mis-orientation controlled cross-plane thermoelectricity in twisted bilayer graphene
Abstract
The introduction of 'twist' or relative rotation between two atomically thin van der Waals (vdW) membranes gives rise to periodic Moire potential, leading to a substantial altercation of the band structure of the planar assembly. While most of the recent experiments primarily focus on the electronic-band hybridization by probing in-plane transport properties, here we report out-of-plane thermoelectric measurements across the van der Waals gap in twisted bilayer graphene (tBLG), which exhibits an interplay of twist-dependent inter-layer electronic and phononic hybridization. We show that at a large twist angle, the thermopower is entirely driven by a novel phonon drag effect at the sub-nanometer scale, while the electronic component of the thermopower is recovered only when the misorientation between the layers is reduced to less than two degrees. Our experiment shows that cross-plane thermoelectricity at a low angle is exceptionally sensitive to the nature of band dispersion and may provide fundamental insights into the coherence of electronic states in twisted bilayer graphene.
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