The project used a combination of electronic transport, photocurrent and photoconductivity measurements to understand the interplay between topology and electron interactions in moiré quantum materials.
Infrared spectroscopy was employed to probe the band structure of twisted graphene bilayers (TGB) around the magic angle. Measurements revealed distinct spectral features originating from inter-band transitions. Building on this approach, polarisation-resolved IR and THz photocurrent measurements were utilised to probe magic-angle TGB. This technique leveraged the sensitivity of photocurrents to the Berry connection and used THz light resonant with the optical transition of magic-angle TGB’s flat bands. The research unveiled the interplay between quantum geometry and electron interactions in TGB. We detected inversion-breaking gapped states and observed sharp changes in photocurrent polarisation axes due to interaction-induced band renormalisation. Recurring photocurrent patterns allowed us to track the evolution of quantum geometry through a cascade of phase transitions. This work also laid the groundwork for innovative THz quantum technologies.
Following, we also took advantage of high-current features in bilayer graphene-hBN superlattices to engineer highly photosensitive non-equilibrium electron phases. This was based on the identification of a negative differential conductance region with a sensitive bistable state. A novel single-photon detection mechanism was demonstrated, capable of single-photon detection at mid-infrared and visible wavelengths. The detector operated at temperatures up to 30K, an order of magnitude above state-of-the-art single-photon detectors. The technology is compatible with standard CMOS fabrication processes and photonic integrated circuits.
References:
1. Li, G. et al. Infrared Spectroscopy for Diagnosing Superlattice Minibands in Twisted Bilayer Graphene near the Magic Angle. Nano Lett. 24, 15956–15963 (2024).
2. Krishna Kumar, R. et al. Terahertz photocurrent probe of quantum geometry and interactions in magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene. Nat. Mater. 24, 1034-1041 (2025).
3. Nowakowski, K. et al. Single-photon detection enabled by negative differential conductivity in moiré superlattices. Preprint at arXiv: 2505.13637 (2025).