Magnetic-field-assisted electron confinement and valley splitting in strained graphene
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Spatially varying strained graphene can acquire interesting electronic properties because of the strain-induced valley-dependent gauge (pseudomagnetic) fields1,2. Here we report the realization of strained graphene regions located close to the step edges of Cu(111), obtained by using thermal strain engineering3,4. We study these strained structures with sub-nanometre-resolved scanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy and identify their spatially modulated Dirac points, demonstrating the effect of overlap of Cu and graphene wave functions on the charge transfer between them5. By applying a magnetic field of 8 Tesla, electron confinement, as revealed by regularly spaced sharp resonances6,7, is observed in the strained graphene. In some regions of the strained graphene, repetitive pairs of resonance peaks appear in the tunnelling spectra. This provides direct and compelling evidence for lifting of valley degeneracy due to the coexistence of both the magnetic field and the pseudomagnetic field.
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