It is well established that strain and geometry could affect the band structure of graphene monolayer dramatically. Here we study the evolution of local electronic properties of a twisted graphene bilayer induced by a strain and a high curvature, which are found to strongly affect the local band structures of the twisted graphene bilayer. The energy difference of the two low-energy van Hove singularities decreases with increasing lattice deformation and the states condensed into well-defined pseudo-Landau levels, which mimic the quantization of massive chiral fermions in a magnetic field of about 100 T, along a graphene wrinkle. The joint effect of strain and out-of-plane distortion in the graphene wrinkle also results in a valley polarization with a significant gap. These results suggest that strained graphene bilayer could be an ideal platform to realize the high-temperature zero-field quantum valley Hall effect. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
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Yan, W., He, W. Y., Chu, Z. D., Liu, M., Meng, L., Dou, R. F., … He, L. (2013). Strain and curvature induced evolution of electronic band structures in twisted graphene bilayer. Nature Communications, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms3159