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Insulating state in tetralayers reveals an even-odd interaction effect in multilayer graphene

Published 27 Jan 2015 in cond-mat.mes-hall | (1501.06764v1)

Abstract: The absence of an energy gap separating valence and conduction bands makes the low-energy electronic properties of graphene and its multi-layers sensitive to electron-electron interactions. In bilayers, for instance, interactions are predicted to open a gap at charge neutrality, turning the system into an insulator, as observed experimentally. In mono and (Bernal-stacked) trilayers, interactions, although still important, do not have an equally drastic effect, and these systems remain conducting at low temperature. It may be expected that interaction effects become weaker for thicker multilayers, whose behavior should eventually converge to that of graphite. Here we show that this expectation does not correspond to reality by investigating the case of Bernal-stacked tetralayer graphene (4LG). We reveal the occurrence of a robust insulating state in a narrow range of carrier densities around charge neutrality, incompatible with the behavior expected from the single-particle band structure. The phenomenology resembles that observed in bilayers, but the stronger conductance suppression makes the insulating state in 4LG visible at higher temperature. To account for our findings, we suggest a natural generalization of the interaction-driven, symmetry-broken states proposed for bilayers. This generalization also explains the systematic even-odd effect of interactions in Bernal-stacked layers of different thickness that is emerging from experiments, and has implications for the multilayer-to-graphite crossover.

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