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Bosonic field theory of tunable edge magnetism in graphene

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 Added by Manuel J. Schmidt
 Publication date 2012
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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A bosonic field theory is derived for the tunable edge magnetism at graphene zigzag edges. The derivation starts from an effective fermionic theory for the interacting graphene edge states, derived previously from a two-dimensional interacting tight-binding model for graphene. The essential feature of this effective model, which gives rise to the weak edge magnetism, is the momentum-dependent non-local electron-electron interaction. It is shown that this momentum-dependence may be treated by an extension of the bosonization technique, and leads to interactions of the bosonic fields. These interactions are reminiscent of a phi^4 field theory. Focussing onto the regime close to the quantum phase transition between the ferromagnetic and the paramagnetic Luttinger liquid, a semiclassical interpretation of the interacting bosonic theory is given. Furthermore, it is argued that the universal critical behavior at the quantum phase transition between the paramagnetic and the ferromagnetic Luttinger liquid is governed by a small number of terms in this theory, which are accessible by quantum Monte-Carlo methods.



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We study the magnetic properties of graphene edges and graphene/graphane interfaces under the influence of electrostatic gates. For this, an effective low-energy theory for the edge states, which is derived from the Hubbard model of the honeycomb lattice, is used. We first study the edge state model in a mean-field approximation for the Hubbard Hamiltonian and show that it reproduces the results of the extended 2D lattice theory. Quantum fluctuations around the mean-field theory of the effective one-dimensional model are treated by means of the bosonization technique in order to check the stability of the mean-field solution. We find that edge magnetism at graphene/graphane interfaces can be switched on and off by means of electrostatic gates. We describe a quantum phase transition between an ordinary and a ferromagnetic Luttinger liquid - a realization of itinerant one-dimensional ferromagnetism. This mechanism may provide means to experimentally discriminate between edge magnetism or disorder as the reason for a transport gap in very clean graphene nanoribbons.
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