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Carlos Forsythe

Researcher at Columbia University

Publications -  20
Citations -  2360

Carlos Forsythe is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Graphene & Superlattice. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 19 publications receiving 1819 citations. Previous affiliations of Carlos Forsythe include Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory & University of California, San Francisco.

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Hofstadter’s butterfly and the fractal quantum Hall effect in moiré superlattices

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that moiré superlattices arising in bilayer graphene coupled to hexagonal boron nitride provide a periodic modulation with ideal length scales of the order of ten nanometres, enabling unprecedented experimental access to the fractal spectrum.
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Tunable fractional quantum hall phases in bilayer graphene

TL;DR: Fractional QHE states in BLG that show phase transitions that can be tuned by a transverse electric field are reported, providing a model platform with which to study the role of symmetry-breaking in emergent states with topological order.
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Band structure engineering of 2D materials using patterned dielectric superlattices.

TL;DR: In this article, a new approach to fabricate high-mobility superlattice devices by integrating surface dielectric patterning with atomically thin van der Waals materials is presented.
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Band Structure Engineering of 2D Materials using Patterned Dielectric Superlattices

TL;DR: A new approach to fabricate high-mobility superlattice devices by integrating surface dielectric patterning with atomically thin van der Waals materials is reported, addressing the intractable trade-off between device processing and mobility degradation that constrains superLattice engineering in conventional systems.
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Ambipolar Landau levels and strong band-selective carrier interactions in monolayer WSe2.

TL;DR: The Zeeman splitting in the VB is several times higher than the cyclotron energy, far exceeding the predictions of a single-particle model and, moreover, tunes significantly with doping, suggesting that ML WSe2 can serve as a host for new correlated-electron phenomena.