I am looking for existence results on separators of $r$-regular graphs $G=(V,E)$, which have the property that
- $S\subset V$ is a separator
- for all $v,w\in S$ the edge $\langle v,w\rangle\not\in E$ (i.e., an independent set)
- (nice to have) the connected components of $G-S$ have "similar size"
Obviously, this does not exist for graphs which are "too dense", e.g., the complete graph does not contain such a set but I am only looking for cases where $r$ is a lot smaller than $\frac{n}{2}$. The stronger version where every minimal separator is an independent set is discussed in https://cstheory.stackexchange.com/questions/16428/graphs-in-which-every-minimal-separator-is-an-independent-set. But for the simple existence, is this something that has already been of interest in the literature and are there results on the existence of such a $S$?
EDIT: Also $S$ does not need to be minimal. The "balanced" condition should ensure that for example in a triangle free graph with small degree, e.g., $3$ or $4$ with many vertices one could separate away a single vertex by putting all its neighbors in $S$, which would satisfy the first two conditions.