Cryogenic shock exfoliation yields large rhombohedral graphene devices over 1300 square micrometers with 90% fabrication yield, mean free path exceeding 200 micrometers, and signatures of electron hydrodynamics.
Title resolution pending
3 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
fields
cond-mat.mes-hall 3verdicts
UNVERDICTED 3representative citing papers
Superconductivity in twisted WSe2 evolves smoothly with twist angle and stays proximal to a presumed antiferromagnetic Fermi surface reconstruction, independent of Van Hove singularity or half band insulator.
A new theoretical framework enables the quantum twisting microscope to perform momentum-resolved spectroscopy of superconductivity, extracting pairing magnitude and symmetry from tunneling channels in 2D materials.
citing papers explorer
-
Cryogenic shock exfoliation for ultrahigh mobility rhombohedral graphite nanoelectronics
Cryogenic shock exfoliation yields large rhombohedral graphene devices over 1300 square micrometers with 90% fabrication yield, mean free path exceeding 200 micrometers, and signatures of electron hydrodynamics.
-
Angle evolution of the superconducting phase diagram in twisted bilayer WSe2
Superconductivity in twisted WSe2 evolves smoothly with twist angle and stays proximal to a presumed antiferromagnetic Fermi surface reconstruction, independent of Van Hove singularity or half band insulator.
-
Momentum-resolved spectroscopy of superconductivity with the quantum twisting microscope
A new theoretical framework enables the quantum twisting microscope to perform momentum-resolved spectroscopy of superconductivity, extracting pairing magnitude and symmetry from tunneling channels in 2D materials.