Competing orders and cascade of degeneracy lifting in doped Bernal bilayer graphene

Abstract

Motivated by recent experiments [H. Zhou, et al., Science 375, 774 (2022) and S. C. de la Barrera, et al., arXiv:2110.13907], here we propose a general mechanism for valley and/or spin degeneracy lifting of the electronic bands in doped Bernal bilayer graphene, subject to electric displacement (D) fields. A D-field induced layer polarization (LP), when accompanied by Hubbard repulsion driven layer antiferromagnet (LAF) and next-nearest-neighbor repulsion driven quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) orders, lifts the four-fold degeneracy of electronic bands, yielding a quarter metal for small doping, as also observed in ABC trilayer graphene. With the disappearance of the QAH order, electronic bands recover two-fold valley degeneracy, thereby forming a conventional or compensated (with majority and minority carriers) half-metal at moderate doping, depending on the relative strength of LP and LAF. At even higher doping and for weak D-field only LAF survives and the Fermi surface recovers four-fold degeneracy. We also show that a pure repulsive electronic interaction mediated triplet f-wave pairing emerges from a parent correlated nematic liquid or compensated half-metal when an in-plane magnetic field is applied to the system.

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