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Two-dimensional atomic crystals can radically change their properties in response to external influences such as substrate orientation or strain, resulting in essentially new materials in terms of the electronic structure. A striking example is the creation of flat-bands in bilayer-graphene for certain magic twist-angles between the orientations of the two layers. The quenched kinetic-energy in these flat-bands promotes electron-electron interactions and facilitates the emergence of strongly-correlated phases such as superconductivity and correlated-insulators. However, the exquisite fine-tuning required for finding the magic-angle where flat-bands appear in twisted-bilayer graphene, poses challenges to fabrication and scalability. Here we present an alternative route to creating flat-bands that does not involve fine tuning. Using scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy, together with numerical simulations, we demonstrate that graphene monolayers placed on an atomically-flat substrate can be forced to undergo a buckling-transition, resulting in a periodically modulated pseudo-magnetic field, which in turn creates a post-graphene material with flat electronic bands. Bringing the Fermi-level into these flat-bands by electrostatic doping, we observe a pseudogap-like depletion in the density-of-states, which signals the emergence of a correlated-state. The described approach of 2D crystal buckling offers a strategy for creating other superlattice systems and, in particular, for exploring interaction phenomena characteristic of flat-bands.
Interactions between stacked two-dimensional (2D) atomic crystals can radically change their properties, leading to essentially new materials in terms of the electronic structure. Here we show that monolayers placed on an atomically flat substrate ca
Monolayer graphene placed with a twist on top of AB-stacked bilayer graphene hosts topological flat bands in a wide range of twist angles. The dispersion of these bands and gaps between them can be efficiently controlled by a perpendicular electric f
We investigate the electronic structure of the flat bands induced by moire superlattices and electric fields in nearly aligned ABC trilayer graphene-boron nitride interfaces where Coulomb effects can lead to correlated gapped phases. Our calculations
We prescribe general rules to predict the existence of edge states and zero-energy flat bands in graphene nanoribbons and graphene edges of arbitrary shape. No calculations are needed. For the so-called {it{minimal}} edges, the projection of the edge
Moire superlattices in transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) heterostructures can host novel correlated quantum phenomena due to the interplay of narrow moire flat bands and strong, long-range Coulomb interactions1-5. However, microscopic knowledge o