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Dive into the research topics where Jia-Bin Qiao is active.

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Featured researches published by Jia-Bin Qiao.


Nature Communications | 2016

Direct imaging of topological edge states at a bilayer graphene domain wall

Long-Jing Yin; Hua Jiang; Jia-Bin Qiao; Lin He

The AB–BA domain wall in gapped graphene bilayers is a rare naked structure hosting topological electronic states. Although it has been extensively studied in theory, a direct imaging of its topological edge states is still missing. Here we image the topological edge states at the graphene bilayer domain wall by using scanning tunnelling microscope. The simultaneously obtained atomic-resolution images of the domain wall provide us unprecedented opportunities to measure the spatially varying edge states within it. The one-dimensional conducting channels are observed to be mainly located around the two edges of the domain wall, which is reproduced quite well by our theoretical calculations. Our experiment further demonstrates that the one-dimensional topological states are quite robust even in the presence of high magnetic fields. The result reported here may raise hopes of graphene-based electronics with ultra-low dissipation.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Scanning Tunneling Microscopy of the .PI. Magnetism of a Single Carbon Vacancy in Graphene

Yu Zhang; Si-Yu Li; Huaqing Huang; Wen-Tian Li; Jia-Bin Qiao; Wen-Xiao Wang; Long-Jing Yin; Ke-Ke Bai; Wenhui Duan; Lin He

The pristine graphene is strongly diamagnetic. However, graphene with single carbon atom defects could exhibit paramagnetism with local magnetic moments ~ 1.5 per vacancy1-6. Theoretically, both the electrons and electrons of graphene contribute to the magnetic moment of the defects, and the pi magnetism is characterizing of two spin-split DOS (density-of-states) peaks close to the Dirac point1,6. Since its prediction, many experiments attempt to study this pi magnetism in graphene, whereas, only a notable resonance peak has been observed around the atomic defects6-9, leaving the pi magnetism experimentally so elusive. Here, we report direct experimental evidence of the pi magnetism by using scanning tunnelling microscope. We demonstrate that the localized state of the atomic defects is split into two DOS peaks with energy separations of several tens meV and the two spin-polarized states degenerate into a profound peak at positions with distance of ~ 1 nm away from the monovacancy. Strong magnetic fields further increase the energy separations of the two spin-polarized peaks and lead to a Zeeman-like splitting. The effective g-factors geff around the atomic defect is measured to be about 40. Such a giant enhancement of the g-factor is attributed to the strong spin polarization of electron density and large electron-electron interactions near the atomic vacancy.


Physical Review B | 2014

Angle-dependent van Hove singularities and their breakdown in twisted graphene bilayers

Wei Yan; Lan Meng; Mengxi Liu; Jia-Bin Qiao; Zhao-Dong Chu; Rui-Fen Dou; Zhongfan Liu; Jia-Cai Nie; D. G. Naugle; Lin He

The creation of van der Waals heterostructures based on a graphene monolayer and other two-dimensional crystals has attracted great interest because atomic registry of the two-dimensional crystals can modify the electronic spectra and properties of graphene. Twisted graphene bilayer can be viewed as a special van der Waals structure composed of two mutual misoriented graphene layers, where the sublayer graphene not only plays the role of a substrate, but also acts as an equivalent role as the top graphene layer in the structure. Here we report the electronic spectra of slightly twisted graphene bilayers studied by scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy. Our experiment demonstrates that twist-induced van Hove singularities are ubiquitously present for rotation angles theta less than about 3.5o, corresponding to moire-pattern periods D longer than 4 nm. However, they totally vanish for theta > 5.5o (D < 2.5 nm). Such a behavior indicates that the continuum models, which capture moire-pattern periodicity more accurately at small rotation angles, are no longer applicable at large rotation angles.


Physical Review B | 2015

Landau quantization in graphene monolayer, Bernal bilayer, and Bernal trilayer on graphite surface

Long-Jing Yin; Jia-Cai Nie; Lin He; Jia-Bin Qiao; Shanwen Li

Electronic properties of surface areas decoupled from graphite are studied using scanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy. We show that it is possible to identify decoupled graphene monolayer, Bernal bilayer, and Bernal trilayer on graphite surface according to their tunnelling spectra in high magnetic field. The decoupled monolayer and bilayer exhibit Landau quantization of massless and massive Dirac fermions, respectively. The substrate generates a sizable band gap, ~35 meV, in the Bernal bilayer, therefore, the eightfold degenerate Landau level at the charge neutrality point is split into two valley-polarized quartets polarized on each layer. In the decoupled Bernal trilayer, we find that both massless and massive Dirac fermions coexist and its low-energy band structure can be described quite well by taking into account only the nearest-neighbor intra- and interlayer hopping parameters. A strong correlation between the Fermi velocity of the massless Dirac fermions and the effective mass of the massive Dirac fermions is observed in the trilayer. Our result demonstrates that the surface of graphite provides a natural ideal platform to probe the electronic spectra of graphene layers.


Physical Review B | 2015

Detecting giant electron-hole asymmetry in a graphene monolayer generated by strain and charged-defect scattering via Landau level spectroscopy

Ke-Ke Bai; Yi-Cong Wei; Jia-Bin Qiao; Si-Yu Li; Long-Jing Yin; Wei Yan; Jia-Cai Nie; Lin He

The electron-hole symmetry in graphene monolayer, which is analogous to the inherent symmetric structure between electrons and positrons of the Universe, plays a crucial role in the chirality and chiral tunneling of massless Dirac fermions. Here we demonstrate that both strain and charged-defect scattering could break this symmetry dramatically in a graphene monolayer. In our experiment, the Fermi velocities of electrons


Physical Review B | 2015

Landau quantization and Fermi velocity renormalization in twisted graphene bilayers

Long-Jing Yin; Jia-Bin Qiao; Wen-Xiao Wang; Wei-Jie Zuo; Wei Yan; Rui Xu; Rui-Fen Dou; Jia-Cai Nie; Lin He

{v}_{F}^{e}


Physical Review B | 2015

Atomic resolution imaging of the two-component Dirac-Landau levels in a gapped graphene monolayer

Long-Jing Yin; T. C. Cai; Rui-Fen Dou; Jia-Cai Nie; Lin He; Jia-Bin Qiao; X. S. Wu; Wen-Xiao Wang; Shanwen Li

and holes


Physical Review B | 2016

Experimental observation of surface states and Landau levels bending in bilayer graphene

Long-Jing Yin; Yu Zhang; Jia-Bin Qiao; Si-Yu Li; Lin He

{v}_{F}^{h}


Physical Review B | 2015

Direct probing of the stacking order and electronic spectrum of rhombohedral trilayer graphene with scanning tunneling microscopy

Long-Jing Yin; Jia-Cai Nie; Rui Xu; Lin He; Jia-Bin Qiao; Ke-Ke Bai

are measured directly through Landau level spectroscopy. In strained graphene with lattice deformation and curvature, the


Physical Review B | 2017

Massless Dirac fermions trapping in a quasi-one-dimensional npn junction of a continuous graphene monolayer

Ke-Ke Bai; Jia-Bin Qiao; Hua Jiang; Haiwen Liu; Lin He

{v}_{F}^{e}

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Lin He

Beijing Normal University

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Long-Jing Yin

Beijing Normal University

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Ke-Ke Bai

Beijing Normal University

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Si-Yu Li

Beijing Normal University

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Jia-Cai Nie

Beijing Normal University

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Wei-Jie Zuo

Beijing Normal University

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Wen-Xiao Wang

Beijing Normal University

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Yu Zhang

Beijing Normal University

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Rui-Fen Dou

Beijing Normal University

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