Physical Review X (Jul 2022)

Valley Isospin Controlled Fractional Quantum Hall States in Bilayer Graphene

  • Ke Huang,
  • Hailong Fu,
  • Danielle Reifsnyder Hickey,
  • Nasim Alem,
  • Xi Lin,
  • Kenji Watanabe,
  • Takashi Taniguchi,
  • Jun Zhu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.12.031019
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. 031019

Abstract

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A two-dimensional electron system placed in a magnetic field develops Landau levels, where strong Coulomb interactions lead to the appearance of many-body correlated ground states. Quantum numbers similar to the electron spin enable the understanding and control of complex ground state order and collective excitations. Owing to its spin, valley, and orbital degrees of freedom, Bernal-stacked bilayer graphene offers a rich platform to pursue correlated phenomena in two dimensions. In this work, we fabricate dual-gated Bernal-stacked bilayer graphene devices and demonstrate unprecedented fine control over its valley isospin degrees of freedom using a perpendicular electric field. Higher sample quality enables us to probe regimes obscured by disorder in previous studies. We present evidence for a new even-denominator fractional quantum Hall state at filling factor ν=5/2. The 5/2 state is found to be spontaneously valley polarized in the limit of vanishing valley Zeeman splitting, consistent with a theoretical prediction made regarding the spin polarization of the Moore-Read state. In the vicinity of the even-denominator fractional quantum Hall states, we observe the appearance of the predicted Levin-Halperin daughter states of the Moore-Read Pfaffian wave function at ν=3/2 and 7/2 and of the anti-Pfaffian at ν=5/2 and −1/2. These observations suggest the breaking of particle-hole symmetry in bilayer graphene. We construct a comprehensive valley polarization phase diagram for the Jain sequence fractional states surrounding filling factor 3/2. These results are well explained by a two-component composite fermion model, further demonstrating the SU(2) nature of the valley isospin in bilayer graphene. Our experiment paves the path for future efforts of manipulating the valley isospin in bilayer graphene to engineer exotic topological orders and quantum information processes.