Published April 11, 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Tunable magnetic confinement effect in a magnetic superlattice of graphene

  • 1. University of Illinois
  • 2. University of Chicago

Description

Two-dimensional van der Waals materials such as graphene present an opportunity for band structure engineering using custom superlattice potentials. In this study, we demonstrate how self-assemblies of magnetic iron-oxide (Fe3O4) nanospheres stacked on monolayer graphene generate a proximity-induced magnetic superlattice in graphene and modify its band structure. Interactions between the nanospheres and the graphene layer generate superlattice Dirac points in addition to a gapped energy spectrum near the K and K′ valleys, resulting in magnetic confinement of quasiparticles around the nanospheres. This is evidenced by gate-dependent resistance oscillations, observed in our low temperature transport measurements, and confirmed by self-consistent tight binding calculations. Furthermore, we show that an external magnetic field can tune the magnetic superlattice potential created by the nanospheres, and thus the transport characteristics of the system. This technique for magnetic-field-tuned band structure engineering using magnetic nanostructures can be extended to a broader class of 2D van der Waals and topological materials.

Data availability

The data used in this study are available upon reasonable request from the corresponding author O.T..

The code used in this study are available upon reasonable request from the corresponding author M.G..

Files

Tunable-magnetic-confinement-effect-in-a-magnetic-superlattice-of-graphene.pdf

Files (2.7 MB)

Name Size Download all
Supplementary information
md5:db8b929d3c69ef82b2a2fb5ee09749eb
1.1 MB Preview Download
Article
md5:d29dcc88000920b9411da55ebbd927b4
1.6 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/s41699-024-00468-7
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:11550

Funding

Army Research Office
W911-NF191-0346
National Science Foundation
MRSEC Award

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering