Dirac electrons in a dodecagonal graphene quasicrystal.
Sung Joon AhnPilkyung MoonTae-Hoon KimHyun-Woo KimHa-Chul ShinEun Hye KimHyun Woo ChaSe-Jong KahngPhilip KimMikito KoshinoYoung-Woo SonCheol-Woong YangJoung Real AhnPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2018)
Quantum states of quasiparticles in solids are dictated by symmetry. We have experimentally demonstrated quantum states of Dirac electrons in a two-dimensional quasicrystal without translational symmetry. A dodecagonal quasicrystalline order was realized by epitaxial growth of twisted bilayer graphene rotated exactly 30°. We grew the graphene quasicrystal up to a millimeter scale on a silicon carbide surface while maintaining the single rotation angle over an entire sample and successfully isolated the quasicrystal from a substrate, demonstrating its structural and chemical stability under ambient conditions. Multiple Dirac cones replicated with the 12-fold rotational symmetry were observed in angle-resolved photoemission spectra, which revealed anomalous strong interlayer coupling with quasi-periodicity. Our study provides a way to explore physical properties of relativistic fermions with controllable quasicrystalline orders.