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      Fermions on bilayer graphene: symmetry breaking for B=0 and nu=0

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          Abstract

          We extend previous analyses of fermions on a honeycomb bilayer lattice via weak-coupling renormalization group (RG) methods with extremely short-range and extremely long-range interactions to the case of finite-range interactions. In particular, we consider different types of interactions including screened Coulomb interactions, much like those produced by a point charge placed either above a single infinite conducting plate or exactly halfway between two parallel infinite conducting plates. Our considerations are motivated by the fact that, in some recent experiments on bilayer graphene there is a single gate while in others there are two gates, which can function as the conducting planes and which, we argue, can lead to distinct broken symmetry phases. We map out the phases that the system enters as a function of the range of the interaction. We discover that the system enters an antiferromagnetic phase for short ranges of the interaction and a nematic phase at long ranges, in agreement with previous work. While the antiferromagnetic phase results in a gap in the spectrum, the nematic phase is gapless, splitting the quadratic degeneracy points into two Dirac cones each. We also consider the effects of an applied magnetic field on the system in the antiferromagnetic phase via variational mean field theory. At low fields, we find that the antiferromagnetic order parameter, Delta(B)-Delta(0) \sim B^2. At higher fields, when omega_c > 2*Delta_0, we find that Delta(B)=omega_c/[ln(omega_c/Delta(0))+C], where C=0.67 and omega_c=eB/m^*c. We also determine the energy gap for creating electron-hole excitations in the system, and, at high fields, we find it to be a*omega_c+2*Delta(B), where a is a non-universal, interaction-dependent, constant.

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          Most cited references15

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          The electronic properties of graphene

          This article reviews the basic theoretical aspects of graphene, a one atom thick allotrope of carbon, with unusual two-dimensional Dirac-like electronic excitations. The Dirac electrons can be controlled by application of external electric and magnetic fields, or by altering sample geometry and/or topology. We show that the Dirac electrons behave in unusual ways in tunneling, confinement, and integer quantum Hall effect. We discuss the electronic properties of graphene stacks and show that they vary with stacking order and number of layers. Edge (surface) states in graphene are strongly dependent on the edge termination (zigzag or armchair) and affect the physical properties of nanoribbons. We also discuss how different types of disorder modify the Dirac equation leading to unusual spectroscopic and transport properties. The effects of electron-electron and electron-phonon interactions in single layer and multilayer graphene are also presented.
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            Renormalization Group Approach to Interacting Fermions

            R. Shankar (1993)
            The stability of nonrelativistic fermionic systems to interactions is studied within the Renormalization Group framework. A brief introduction to \(\phi^4\) theory in four dimensions and the path integral formulation for fermions is given. The strategy is as follows. First, the modes on either side of the Fermi surface within a cut-off \(\Lambda\) are chosen and a path integral is written to describe them. An RG transformation which eliminates a part of these modes, but preserves the action of the noninteracting system is identified. Finally the possible perturbations of this free-field fixed point are classified as relevant, irrelevant or marginal. A \(d=1\) warmup calculation involving a system of fermions shows how, in contrast to mean-field theory, the RG correctly yields a scale invariant system (Luttinger liquid) In \(d=2\) and 3, for rotationally invariant Fermi surfaces, {\em automatically} leads to Landau's Fermi liquid theory, which appears as a fixed point characterized by an effective mass and a Landau function \(F\), with the only relevant perturbations being of the superconducting (BCS) type The functional flow equations for the BCS couplings are derived and separated into an infinite number of flows, one for each angular momentum. It is shown that similar results hold for rotationally non-invariant (but time-reversal invariant) Fermi surfaces also, A study of a nested Fermi surface shows an additional relevant flow leading to charge density wave formation. For small \(\Lambda / K_F\), a 1/N expansion emerges, with \(N = K_F/ \Lambda\), which explains why one is able to solve the narrow cut-off theory. The search for non-Fermi liquids in \(d=2\)
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              Coulomb-driven broken-symmetry states in doubly gated suspended bilayer graphene

              The non-interacting energy spectrum of graphene and its bilayer counterpart consists of multiple degeneracies owing to the inherent spin, valley and layer symmetries. Interactions among charge carriers are expected to spontaneously break these symmetries, leading to gapped ordered states. In the quantum Hall regime these states are predicted to be ferromagnetic in nature whereby the system becomes spin polarized, layer polarized or both. In bilayer graphene, due to its parabolic dispersion, interaction-induced symmetry breaking is already expected at zero magnetic field. In this work, the underlying order of the various broken-symmetry states is investigated in bilayer graphene that is suspended between top and bottom gate electrodes. By controllably breaking the spin and sublattice symmetries we are able to deduce the order parameter of the various quantum Hall ferromagnetic states. At small carrier densities, we identify for the first time three distinct broken symmetry states, one of which is consistent with either spontaneously broken time-reversal symmetry or spontaneously broken rotational symmetry.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                08 November 2011
                2012-07-31
                Article
                10.1103/PhysRevB.86.115447
                1111.2076
                d0b39c1e-d947-4abc-8a90-1ae8152edd20

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                Phys. Rev. B 86, 115447 (2012)
                19 pages, 5 figures. Change of focus from the previous version to consider only spin-1/2 fermions and to incorporate finite-temperature results found in arXiv:1206.0288. Major revisions to text and figures. New sections added to discuss the energy gap in the system
                cond-mat.str-el cond-mat.mes-hall cond-mat.other

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