Scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the National Institute for Materials Science in Tsukuba, Japan, have discovered that electrons can form crystalline structures in materials composed of either four or five layers of graphene. (Graphene is a one-atom-thick layer of carbon atoms arranged in hexagons, which looks like a honeycomb structure.) Last year, the scientists reported that electrons became fractions of themselves upon applying a current to a material composed of rhombohedral pentalayer graphene and hexagonal boron nitride. This time, the scientists have shown that electrons can become fractions of themselves without a magnetic field. They also found that what they saw last time can be understood to emerge in an electron “liquid” phase, analogous to water, and what they have now observed can be interpreted as an electron “solid” phase that looks like the formation of electronic “ice.”
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