ABSTRACT
We present electronic structure calculations of twisted double bilayer graphene (TDBG): a tetralayer graphene structure composed of two AB-stacked graphene bilayers with a relative rotation angle between them. Using first-principles calculations, we find that TDBG is semiconducting with a band gap that depends on the twist angle, that can be tuned by an external electric field. The gap is consistent with TDBG symmetry and its magnitude is related to surface effects, driving electron transfer from outer to inner layers. The surface effect competes with an energy upshift of localized states at inner layers, giving rise to the peculiar angle dependence of the band gap, which reduces at low angles. For these low twist angles, the TDBG develops flat bands, in which electrons in the inner layers are localized at the AA regions, as in twisted bilayer graphene.
ABSTRACT
The effects of edge magnetism on the Kohn anomaly (KA) of the G-band phonons of zigzag graphene nanoribbons (ZGNRs) are studied using a combination of the tight-binding and mean-field Hubbard models. We show that the opening of an energy gap, induced by magnetic ordering, significantly changes the KA effects, particularly for narrow ribbons in which the gap is larger than the phonon energy. Therefore, the G-band phonon frequency and lifetime are altered for a magnetically-ordered edge state with respect to an unpolarized edge state. The effects of temperature, ZGNR width, doping and transverse electric fields are systematically investigated. We propose using this effect to probe the magnetic order of edge states in graphene nanoribbons using Raman spectroscopy.
ABSTRACT
Spin excitations in zigzag graphene nanoribbons are studied when the system is subjected to an electric field in the transversal direction. The magnetic properties and the lifetime of the spin excitations are systematically investigated and compared using a tight-binding electron-electron model treated by a mean-field Hubbard model. The effects of electron-hole asymmetry introduced by next-nearest neighbor hopping are also investigated. We show that by increasing the electric field, the antiferromagnetic correlations between the edges of the nanoribbons are decreased due to a reduction of the magnetic moments. The results show that the spin wave lifetime may be controlled by the intensity of the transversal electric field, indicating that zigzag nanoribbons may be considered great candidates for future spintronic applications.