Abstract
The electronic band structure of a material can acquire interesting topological properties in the presence of a magnetic field or as a result of the spin–orbit coupling1,2,3. We study graphene on Ir, with Pb monolayer islands intercalated between the graphene sheet and the Ir surface. Although the graphene layer is structurally unaffected by the presence of the Pb islands, its electronic properties change markedly, with regularly spaced resonances appearing. We interpret these resonances as the effect of a strong and spatially modulated spin–orbit coupling, induced in graphene by the Pb monolayer. As well as confined electronic states, the electronic spectrum has a series of gaps with non-trivial topological properties, resembling a realization of the quantum spin Hall effect proposed by Bernevig and Zhang4.
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The use of graphene in spintronic devices has been suggested on the basis of the very large values of the spin diffusion length expected for graphene5. Apart from this role as spin ‘conserver’, it would be highly desirable to be able to manipulate the spins in graphene, which could be achieved by enhancing the rather weak spin–orbit (S–O) coupling characteristic of the C atoms. Enhancing the S–O interaction in graphene also has implications from a rather fundamental point of view. The existence of non-trivial topological properties induced by a suitable S–O coupling (the topological insulator state) was first proposed for two-dimensional graphene6,7. Considering the negligible value of the S–O coupling in graphene, the observation of topological insulator features in graphene, however, would require extremely low temperatures and a high degree of perfection8. Alternative routes to modify the S–O interaction in graphene have been put forward9. Although these proposals have not yet been realized, the internal degrees of freedom of graphene allow pseudo-magnetic fields10 induced by lattice deformations. The existence of these pseudo-fields leads to the possibility of confined electronic states in graphene, which has been experimentally reported around nanobubbles11 and wrinkles12. Here we show that a spatial variation in the intensity of the S–O coupling in graphene induced by the partial intercalation of heavy atoms, such as Pb, with the appropriate symmetries generates a pseudo-magnetic field that confines electrons and results in a series of sharp, Landau-like levels in the density of states of graphene.
Graphene can be grown on Ir(111) by direct decomposition of 8 × 10−8 torr of ethylene at 1,400 K on the Ir surface13,14. Large-scale images show the presence of an almost complete monolayer of graphene, with some wrinkles (see also Supplementary Fig. 1a). The bonding between graphene and Ir(111) is weak15,16. Most of the graphene overlayer presents a well-known incommensurate 9.3 × 9.3 moiré superstructure13 with a geometrical corrugation of 35 pm (ref. 16), arising from the lattice mismatch of graphene with respect to the Ir substrate. In addition, the graphene overlayer is weakly p-doped by charge transfer to the substrate, with the Dirac energy at +100 meV (above the Fermi level), and it exhibits the conical band dispersion characteristic of free-standing graphene17.
Intercalation of Pb under the graphene monolayer is easily achieved by evaporating Pb onto the graphene/Ir(111) (for short, gr/Ir(111)) sample kept at 800 K if the graphene monolayer presents domain boundaries, wrinkles or other extended defects18,19 (see Supplementary Information A.1 for details). Figure 1a shows a representative, large-scale scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) image of the partly Pb-intercalated graphene, corresponding to an intercalation ratio of the order of 20% of the surface (see also Supplementary Fig. 1b). Some Pb-intercalated islands appear in the terraces (frequently close to graphene wrinkles), but most of the intercalated regions are located at the step edges. The Pb coverage has been selected so that the lateral size of the islands ranges from 4 to 12 nm (average of 6 nm) and their average separation is around 35 nm.
Figure 1b shows an atomically resolved STM image acquired at the edge of one of the Pb-intercalated islands. The right part of the image corresponds to the gr/Ir region, where two hexagonal lattices can be seen: the atomic lattice of graphene and the 9.3 × 9.3 moiré structure. As well as these two lattices, the intercalated region on the left exhibits an additional rectangular structure arising from the Pb interlayer. Graphene’s atomic lattice covers both regions continuously across the atomic step, as shown by the line profile in Fig. 1c, which also demonstrates that graphene on top of the Pb-intercalated islands presents a negligible corrugation, certainly well below the small corrugation of gr/Ir(111). The apparent height of the islands (see Fig. 1c and histogram in Supplementary Fig. 1b) indicates that the intercalated layer is just one Pb atom thick.
Figure 1d shows the atomic structure of the intercalated system in real space as deduced from low-energy electron diffraction (LEED) patterns and Fourier transforms of large-scale, atomically resolved STM images (see Supplementary Information A.2). According to our measurements, neither the graphene nor the Ir lattice parameters change upon Pb intercalation, so that the moiré pattern is maintained (shown in green). Intercalated Pb atoms form a rectangular lattice (shown in red) which corresponds to a c(4 × 2) superstructure commensurate with Ir and, therefore, incommensurate with graphene. The Dirac point for the Pb-intercalated graphene is estimated to be at ±110 ± 20 meV from the diameter of the inter-valley scattering half-moon rings observed in the STM Fourier transforms (see Supplementary Information A.2.3 and Supplementary Fig. 3b). Notice that the density of Pb atoms in the intercalated layer is rather high—one seventh of the density of C atoms in graphene.
The local density of states (LDOS) at the graphene regions intercalated with Pb was measured by scanning tunnelling spectroscopy (STS) at 4.6 K using standard lock-in techniques (see Supplementary Information A.3). Figure 2 shows a representative differential conductance spectrum measured on the 10-nm-wide Pb-intercalated island that appears in the inset of Fig. 2. Up to eight clearly defined, intense and sharp peaks in an ≈3 eV wide region are observed. The full-width at half-maximum of the peaks is of the order of 40 meV. The (rather featureless) spectra recorded on the pristine gr/Ir(111) surface or on a completely Pb-intercalated graphene monolayer do not show this series of sharp resonances, as demonstrated in Supplementary Fig. 5 (Supplementary Information A.3). By placing the estimated Dirac point at −110 meV below the Fermi energy (orange line in Fig. 2; that is, the Pb-intercalated graphene is slightly n-doped), the peaks seem to be symmetrically distributed above and below it, with the n = 0 peak missing. The separation between peaks is nearly constant (that is, En ∼ n), at an average of 340 meV for an island of this size. The effect is observed in all gr/Pb islands, and it is robust, independent of the detailed shape of the Pb islands and of the defects present at the edges (or interior) of the islands. The peak separation is roughly inversely proportional to the size of the islands and the peaks can be clearly detected even at 80 K (see Supplementary Information A.3 for details). These quantized energy levels are similar to the Landau levels that arise when electrons in two-dimensional systems are confined by an external magnetic field.
As shown in Fig. 3, the STS spectra recorded when going from the Pb-intercalated graphene region (red cross on a and red curve on c) into the gr/Ir area (blue cross on a and blue curve on c) demonstrate that all the peaks shift, essentially in a rigid fashion on entering the gr/Ir region. The quantized levels (labelled from 1 to 6, starting at the Dirac point) appear in both regions with the same energy separation (∼340 meV), but shifted in energy by nearly 200 meV, which is almost exactly the difference in Dirac energy between both regions (−110 meV for gr/Pb and +100 meV for gr/Ir). The smooth shift of the quantized levels can be clearly seen in the central part of Fig. 3c, where we show (in inverted grey scale) the spatial map of the dI/dV intensity along the green arrow in Fig. 3a. The shift follows strictly the variation of the Dirac point when moving between the two regions (in fact there is an exception, namely the unlabelled peak between peaks 5 and 6, which shifts by nearly 300 meV and coalesces with n = 5 well into the gr/Ir region). All the peaks are clearly visible even 10 nm away from the physical edge of the Pb-intercalated graphene region into the gr/Ir region (that is, at the position signalled by the blue cross).
Figure 3d shows the energy position of the quantized levels as a function of their quantum number, n. A linear dependence that intersects at the respective Dirac points is evident for both gr/Pb/Ir(111) and gr/Ir(111) data sets. Under an actual magnetic field, the energy of the Landau levels, En, is expected to depend linearly on n (En = ℏωc (n + 1/2)) for a two-dimensional electronic system with parabolic dispersion, on n1/2 for graphene20 (En = sgn(n) ℏωcn1/2) and on [n(n + 1)]1/2 (which is roughly similar to n) for bilayer graphene, a system with a small gap.
The observation of the sharp resonances described above implies the existence of quasi-localized electronic states. The scale of the confinement, l, can be inferred from the gaps, Δ, between resonances, l ≈ vF/Δ ≈ 2–3 nm. The confinement of electrons in graphene by scalar potential barriers (for example, at the island edges) over lengths much greater than the interatomic distance, a ≈ 0.14 nm, is prevented by the Klein tunnelling associated with the chirality of the wavefunctions21, and localized states are typically found only in the presence of defects at the Dirac energy. Furthermore, although the n–p barriers (≈200 meV) at the interfaces between gr/Pb/Ir(111) and gr/Ir(111) could confine electrons, it is hard to imagine that the confinement can extend to states that have energies of several eV, as observed here.
The most common sources of confinement at arbitrary energies are gauge fields8,10,22. The effective magnetic field required to generate the observed gaps is B (T) ≈ (25/l (nm))2 ≈ 80–100 T. The formation of localized levels similar to the Landau levels by an effective magnetic field associated with strains has been reported for nanobubbles in gr/Pt(111) (ref. 11) and highly strained wrinkles in twisted bilayers in gr/Rh(111) (ref. 12). However, the graphene layer studied here shows no appreciable strains. If we assume that the observed confinement is induced by a varying strain which changes by over a distance of the order of the size of the Pb island, R ≈ 19 nm, we obtain –0.2, where β = (a/t)∂t/∂a ≈ 2 and t ≈ 3 eV is the hopping between nearest neighbour atoms. The graphene layer studied here is flat and uniform, and there is no hint of strain, such as that estimated above.
The linear dispersion of the graphene bands allows the existence of a variety of mechanisms which can induce gauge fields22,23,24,25, other than strains. Hopping between two graphene layers, for instance, can be formulated as a non-Abelian gauge field25, and this approach can be generalized in a straightforward way to the Rashba S–O coupling in graphene. In the following, we show that the existence of a strong and spatially non-uniform S–O coupling is consistent with the existence of sharp resonances observed experimentally. The gauge field associated with the S–O coupling is more complex than the Abelian field induced by strains, leading to novel structures not observable in real magnetic fields or in the presence of strains.
We have performed density functional theory calculations for ordered arrays of Pb atoms adsorbed on isolated graphene (see Supplementary Information B.1 for details) that demonstrate that electrons from graphene tunnelling through the Pb atoms can feel the large S–O interaction characteristic of these heavy atoms (that is, the S–O parameter for bulk Pb is 0.91 eV; ref. 26) in such a way that the graphene bands are spin split by a giant S–O coupling larger than 100 meV (see Supplementary Figs 7, 8 and 10). Periodically arranged heavy adatoms have been predicted9 to stabilize a Haldane–Kane–Mele phase in graphene6,7. According to the lateral position of the Pb atoms deduced from LEED measurements, graphene on Pb/Ir(111) feels a rectangular c(4 × 2) superlattice. In this situation, it can be shown (see Supplementary Information B.2 for details) that graphene π electrons are perturbed by spin-dependent superlattice potentials in such a way that the effective Dirac-like Hamiltonian valid at both inequivalent valleys reads
where Σ = (±σx, σy) and A = (AxSy, AySx). Here σi (Si) are Pauli matrices acting on sublattice (spin) degrees of freedom, and ± holds for ±K valleys.
The field A can be interpreted as a non-Abelian gauge potential, whereas A0 is a scalar potential with opposite sign at each valley and coupled to the spin operator along the armchair direction, which displaces the sequence of Landau levels from zero in opposite directions. This situation is formally similar to the case of twisted graphene bilayers25, but with the layer degree of freedom replaced by the spin. As in that case, a non-uniform spatial change of the strength of the S–O interaction generated by going from the Pb-intercalated graphene to graphene directly grown on Ir leads to a spatial modulation of the non-Abelian gauge field, which, in turn, leads to a pseudo-magnetic field confining Dirac electrons. In spite of the local character of S–O coupling, the effect is detected at long distances from the physical edge of the Pb-intercalated islands. This reveals the extraordinarily large distances to which perturbations extend in graphene. We argue that the peaks present at the STS spectra are, thus, due to electronic confinement induced by spatially varying S–O fields.
Figure 4a reproduces schematically the spatial evolution of the intensity of the S–O coupling when moving away from the Pb-intercalated region of graphene. Figure 4b shows the calculated LDOS within a tight-binding model, which reproduces the previous Hamiltonian at Dirac points and is parameterized to produce electronics bands in agreement with the density functional theory calculations (see Supplementary Information B.2 and B.3 for details). The best agreement between theory and experiment is achieved when a purely Abelian field (either Ax = 0 or Ay = 0) is generated, but the sharp peaks survive even in the non-Abelian case. The peaks may be interpreted as pseudo-Landau levels associated with effective magnetic fields with opposite sign for each in-plane spin polarization along the armchair direction. The scalar field displaces the Landau spectra associated with each valley. The system resembles a realization of the quantum spin Hall effect proposed by Bernevig and Zhang4. At the edges of the regions where the S–O coupling varies we expect in-plane spin-polarized counter-propagating modes, as shown in Fig. 4a. For an odd number of occupied Landau levels at least one Kramers pair of these edge modes is topologically protected against disorder by time-reversal symmetry. The characteristic decay length of these modes into the region where the S–O changes (the region changing colour in Fig. 4a) can be estimated from the experiments in ≈20a, which is much less than the characteristic length (≈60a) over which the S–O orbit changes in the simulations. The separation between peaks in the calculation roughly follows the expected behaviour for uniform magnetic fields, , although the inclusion of all the possible S–O terms leads to deviations from this sequence. Note that the model includes only the S–O coupling terms in graphene induced by Pb. The nearly constant separation between peaks observed in the experiment may be recovered in a more accurate calculation if more terms (not strictly S–O coupling terms) are included in the model, for instance, opening a spectral gap due to the presence of Pb, as in other graphene superlattices27.
Hybrid structures made up of different two-dimensional layers can have properties different from each of their components27,28. The combination of a graphene and a Pb underlayer leads to a two-dimensional system with electronic resonances not present in either material, associated with the enhancement and the spatial variation of the S–O coupling in the graphene layer. To observe the effect, the intercalated atoms would have to generate strong S–O coupling in the graphene bands, preserve the sublattice symmetry of graphene, and exhibit a distribution of small islands, which could result in a spatial variation of the S–O coupling, whose derivative, in turn, originates the pseudo-magnetic field able to confine electrons. Novel and more exotic effects can be expected if these features are combined with other properties of graphene, such as long-range magnetic order induced by molecular adsorption29, gauge fields induced by strains or the additional degrees of freedom found in twisted graphene bilayers and multilayers30.
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Acknowledgements
We acknowledge support from the Spanish Ministry of Economy (MINECO) through Grant Nos FIS2010-18847, FIS2010-19609-C02-01, FIS2011-23713, FIS2012-33011, FIS2013-40667-P, Gobierno Vasco-UPV/EHU IT-756-13 and the European Research Council Advanced Grant (contract 290846), Comunidad de Madrid through grant MAD2D P2013/MIT-3007 and the European Commission under the Graphene Flagship, contract CNECT-ICT-604391. H.O. thanks the programme JAE-Pre (CSIC, Spain) for financial support.
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The experiments were carried out primarily by F.C. and M.G., with important contributions from S.B., J.J.N. and A.B. The calculations were performed by H.O., M.M.O., E.V.C., A.A. and F.G. The data analysis was carried out by A.L.V.d.P. and F.C. The paper was written by R.M. and F.G. with contributions from F.C., A.L.V.d.P. and H.O.
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Calleja, F., Ochoa, H., Garnica, M. et al. Spatial variation of a giant spin–orbit effect induces electron confinement in graphene on Pb islands. Nature Phys 11, 43–47 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys3173
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys3173
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