Anomalous Transport Gaps of Fractional Quantum Hall Phases in Graphene Landau Levels are Induced by Spin-Valley Entangled Ground States

Abstract

We evaluate the transport gaps in the most prominent fractional quantum Hall states in the n=0 and n=1 Landau Levels of graphene, accounting for the Coulomb interaction, lattice-scale anisotropies, and one-body terms. We find that the fractional phases in the n=0 Landau level are bond-ordered, while those in the n=1 Landau level are spin-valley entangled. This resolves a long-standing experimental puzzle [Amet, et al., Nat. Comm. 6, 5838 (2015)] of the contrasting Zeeman dependence of the transport gaps in the two Landau levels. The spin-valley entangled phases host gapless Goldstone modes that can be probed via bulk thermal transport measurements. As a byproduct of our computations, we place strong constraints on the values of the microscopic anisotropic couplings such that these are consistent with all known experimental results.

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