Minibands in twisted bilayer graphene probed by magnetic focusing.
Alexey I BerdyuginB TsimPiranavan KumaravadivelShuigang XuA CeferinoAngelika KnotheRoshan Krishna KumarT TaniguchiKenji WatanabeAndre K GeimIrina V GrigorievaVladimir I Fal'koPublished in: Science advances (2020)
Magnetic fields force ballistic electrons injected from a narrow contact to move along skipping orbits and form caustics. This leads to pronounced resistance peaks at nearby voltage probes as electrons are effectively focused inside them, a phenomenon known as magnetic focusing. This can be used not only for the demonstration of ballistic transport but also to study the electronic structure of metals. Here, we use magnetic focusing to probe narrowbands in graphene bilayers twisted at ~2°. Their minibands are found to support long-range ballistic transport limited at low temperatures by intrinsic electron-electron scattering. A voltage bias between the layers causes strong minivalley splitting and allows selective focusing for different minivalleys, which is of interest for using this degree of freedom in frequently discussed valleytronics.