Realization of graphene logics in an exciton-enhanced insulating phase
cond-mat.mes-hall
/ Authors
Kaining Yang, Xiang Gao, Yaning Wang, Tongyao Zhang, Pingfan Gu, Zhaoping Luo, Runjie Zheng, Shimin Cao, Hanwen Wang, Xingdan Sun
and 8 more authors
Kenji Watanabe, Takashi Taniguchi, Xiuyan Li, Jing Zhang, Xi Dai, Jianhao Chen, Yu Ye, Zheng Vitto Han
/ Abstract
For two decades, two-dimensional carbon species, including graphene, have been the core of research in pursuing next-generation logic applications beyond the silicon technology. Yet the opening of a gap in a controllable range of doping, whilst keeping high conductance outside of this gapped state, has remained a grand challenge in them thus far. Here we show that, by bringing Bernal-stacked bilayer graphene in contact with an anti-ferromagnetic insulator CrOCl, a strong insulating behavior is observed in a wide range of positive total electron doping $n_\mathrm{tot}$ and effective displacement field $D_\mathrm{eff}$ at low temperatures. Transport measurements further prove that such an insulating phase can be well described by the picture of an inter-layer excitonic state in bilayer graphene owing to electron-hole interactions. The consequential over 1 $\mathrm{GΩ}$ excitonic insulator can be readily killed by tuning $D_\mathrm{eff}$ and/or $n_\mathrm{tot}$, and the system recovers to a high mobility graphene with a sheet resistance of less than 100 $\mathrmΩ$. It thus yields transistors with "ON-OFF" ratios reaching 10$^{7}$, and a CMOS-like graphene logic inverter is demonstrated. Our findings of the robust insulating phase in bilayer graphene may be a leap forward to fertilize the future carbon computing.