At the interface of van der Waals heterostructures, the crystal symmetry and the electronic structure can be reconstructed, giving rise to physical properties superior to or absent in parent materials. Here by studying a Bernal bilayer graphene moiré superlattice encapsulated by 30°-twisted boron nitride flakes, we report an unprecedented ferroelectric polarization with the areal charge density up to 1013 cm−2, which is far beyond the capacity of a moiré band. The translated polarization ~5 pC m−1 is among the highest interfacial ferroelectrics engineered by artificially stacking van der Waals crystals. The gate-specific ferroelectricity and co-occurring anomalous screening are further visualized via Landau levels, and remain robust for Fermi surfaces outside moiré bands, confirming their independence on correlated electrons. We also find that the gate-specific resistance hysteresis loops could be turned off by the other gate, providing an additional control knob. Furthermore, the ferroelectric switching can be applied to intrinsic properties such as topological valley current. Overall, the gate-specific ferroelectricity with strongly enhanced charge polarization may encourage more explorations to optimize and enrich this novel class of ferroelectricity, and promote device applications for ferroelectric switching of various quantum phenomena.
Ionic liquid gating has proved to be effective in inducing emergent quantum phenomena such as superconductivity, ferromagnetism, and topological states. The electrostatic doping at two-dimensional interfaces relies on ionic motion, which thus is operated at sufficiently high temperature. Here, we report the in situ tuning of quantum phases by shining light on an ionic liquid-gated interface at cryogenic temperatures. The light illumination enables flexible switching of the quantum transition in monolayer WS 2 from an insulator to a superconductor. In contrast to the prevailing picture of photoinduced carriers, we find that in the presence of a strong interfacial electric field conducting electrons could escape from the surface confinement by absorbing photons, mimicking the field emission. Such an optical tuning tool in conjunction with ionic liquid gating greatly facilitates continuous modulation of carrier densities and hence electronic phases, which would help to unveil novel quantum phenomena and device functionality in various materials.
Rhombohedral trilayer graphene has recently emerged as a natural flat-band platform for studying interaction-driven symmetry-breaking phases. The displacement field (D) can further flatten the band to enhance the density of states, thereby controlling the electronic correlation that tips the energy balance between spin and valley degrees of freedom. To characterize the energy competition, chemical potential measurementa direct thermodynamic probe of Fermi surfacesis highly demanding to be conducted under a constant D. In this work, we characterize D-dependent isospin flavor polarization, where electronic states with isospin degeneracies of one and two can be identified. We also developed a method to measure the chemical potential at a fixed D, allowing for the extraction of energy variation during phase transitions. Furthermore, symmetry breaking could also be invoked in Landau levels, manifesting as quantum Hall ferromagnetism. Our work opens more opportunities for the thermodynamic characterization of displacement-field tuned van der Waals heterostructures.
The stacking heterostructure of graphene on bulk h-BN produces a moiré pattern with topographic corrugation. The corrugation of the moiré pattern expectantly induces a considerable curvature and a flexoelectric response,...
Electronic correlation in a flat band has been a longstanding interest because of emergent phenomena such as Mott insulator and superconductivity. Besides recent Moiré superlattice, transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) may directly, e.g. by forming a charge density wave in 1T-TaS2, reconstruct a narrow band that exhibits a correlated insulator. Here we report an emergent insulator in electron doped monolayer WSe2, a prototypical TMDs with direct bandgaps. By detailed mapping a cascade of phases “band insulator-superconductor-emergent insulator-metal”, we can identify, besides the superconducting dome, a narrow miniband split from the conduction band, half filling of which coincides with the insulating state. The correlation picture is supported by a density wave that possesses an isolated flat band. Finally, through evolutionary changes within the same class of materials, multivalley population is suggested to account for enhanced superconductivity and the insulator. Our finding provides new opportunities to explore correlated physics within traditionally non-correlated materials.
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