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Bose-Einstein condensation in bilayer graphene

170809 double layer bose-einstein condensate in bilayer graphene

170809 double layer bose-einstein condensate in bilayer graphene

170809 double layer bose-einstein condensate in bilayer graphene

Two studies independently published in Nature Physics demonstrate Bose-Einstein condensation in double-layer bilayer graphene system.

Bose-Einstein condensation occurs when electrons and hole pairs are confined in separate electronic systems, but bound by the Coulomb interaction. This results in a phenomenon where driving a current in one layer induces a voltage in another.

In this case, two bilayer graphene flakes are separated by a flake of hexagonal boron nitride. This creates a structure akin to a Gallium Arsenide-based heterostructures, but with a higher electronic quality and thinner dielectric.

This allows for the observation of quantum Hall drag in graphene  at a temperature 10 times higher, and establish such double-layer bilayer graphene system as a test bed for studying interacting bosonic particles in solid state physics.

Read more:

  1. Excitonic superfluid phase in double bilayer graphene Li et al. Nature Physics 2017
  2. Quantum Hall drag of exciton condensate in graphene Liu et al. Nature Physics 2017

     

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