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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(34): e2307151120, 2023 Aug 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37579169

RESUMEN

Anisotropic hopping in a toy Hofstadter model was recently invoked to explain a rich and surprising Landau spectrum measured in twisted bilayer graphene away from the magic angle. Suspecting that such anisotropy could arise from unintended uniaxial strain, we extend the Bistritzer-MacDonald model to include uniaxial heterostrain and present a detailed analysis of its impact on band structure and magnetotransport. We find that such strain strongly influences band structure, shifting the three otherwise-degenerate van Hove points to different energies. Coupled to a Boltzmann magnetotransport calculation, this reproduces previously unexplained nonsaturating [Formula: see text] magnetoresistance over broad ranges of density near filling [Formula: see text] and predicts subtler features that had not been noticed in the experimental data. In contrast to these distinctive signatures in longitudinal resistivity, the Hall coefficient is barely influenced by strain, to the extent that it still shows a single sign change on each side of the charge neutrality point-surprisingly, this sign change no longer occurs at a van Hove point. The theory also predicts a marked rotation of the electrical transport principal axes as a function of filling even for fixed strain and for rigid bands. More careful examination of interaction-induced nematic order versus strain effects in twisted bilayer graphene could thus be in order.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 129(11): 117602, 2022 Sep 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36154402

RESUMEN

We analytically compute the scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) signatures of integer-filled correlated ground states of the magic angle twisted bilayer graphene (TBG) narrow bands. After experimentally validating the strong-coupling approach at ±4 electrons/moiré unit cell, we consider the spatial features of the STM signal for 14 different many-body correlated states and assess the possibility of Kekulé distortion (KD) emerging at the graphene lattice scale. Remarkably, we find that coupling the two opposite graphene valleys in the intervalley-coherent (IVC) TBG insulators does not always result in KD. As an example, we show that the Kramers IVC state and its nonchiral U(4) rotations do not exhibit any KD, while the time-reversal-symmetric IVC state does. Our results, obtained over a large range of energies and model parameters, show that the STM signal and Chern number of a state can be used to uniquely determine the nature of the TBG ground state.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 127(26): 266402, 2021 Dec 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35029496

RESUMEN

We present a framework for understanding the cascade transitions and the Landau level degeneracies of twisted bilayer graphene. The Coulomb interaction projected onto narrow bands causes the charged excitations at an integer filling to disperse, forming new bands. If the excitation moves the filling away from the charge neutrality point, then it has a band minimum at the moiré Brillouin zone center with a small mass that compares well with the experiment; if towards the charge neutrality point, then it has a much larger mass and a higher degeneracy. At a nonzero density away from an integer filling the excitations interact. The system on the small mass side has a large bandwidth and forms a Fermi liquid. On the large mass side the bandwidth is narrow, the compressibility is negative and the Fermi liquid is likely unstable. This explains the observed sawtooth features in compressibility, the Landau fans pointing away from charge neutrality and their degeneracies. The framework sets the stage for superconductivity at lower temperatures.

4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 125(25): 257602, 2020 Dec 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33416368

RESUMEN

We develop a two stage renormalization group which connects the continuum Hamiltonian for twisted bilayer graphene at length scales shorter than the moire superlattice period to the Hamiltonian for the active narrow bands only which is valid at distances much longer than the moire period. In the first stage, the Coulomb interaction renormalizes the Fermi velocity and the interlayer tunnelings in such a way as to suppress the ratio of the same sublattice to opposite sublatice tunneling, hence approaching the so-called chiral limit. In the second stage, the interlayer tunneling is treated nonperturbatively. Via a progressive numerical elimination of remote bands the relative strength of the one-particle-like dispersion and the interactions within the active narrow band Hamiltonian is determined, thus quantifying the residual correlations and justifying the strong coupling approach in the final step. We also calculate exactly the exciton energy spectrum from the Coloumb interactions projected onto the renormalized narrow bands. The resulting softening of the collective modes marks the propinquity of the enlarged ("hidden") U(4)×U(4) symmetry in the magic angle twisted bilayer graphene.

5.
Phys Rev Lett ; 122(24): 246401, 2019 Jun 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31322361

RESUMEN

We identify states favored by Coulomb interactions projected onto the Wannier basis of the four narrow bands of the "magic angle" twisted bilayer graphene. At the filling of 2 electrons/holes per moiré unit cell, such interactions favor an insulating SU(4) ferromagnet. The kinetic terms select the ground state in which the two valleys with opposite spins are equally mixed, with a vanishing magnetic moment per particle. We also find extended excited states, the gap to which decreases in the magnetic field. An insulating stripe ferromagnetic phase is favored at 1 electron/hole per unit cell.

6.
Phys Rev Lett ; 118(8): 087003, 2017 Feb 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28282187

RESUMEN

We present a novel mechanism of s-wave pairing in Fe-based superconductors. The mechanism involves holes near d_{xz}/d_{yz} pockets only and is applicable primarily to strongly hole doped materials. We argue that as long as the renormalized Hund's coupling J exceeds the renormalized interorbital Hubbard repulsion U^{'}, any finite spin-orbit coupling gives rise to s-wave superconductivity. This holds even at weak coupling and regardless of the strength of the intraorbital Hubbard repulsion U. The transition temperature grows as the hole density decreases. The pairing gaps are fourfold symmetric, but anisotropic, with the possibility of eight accidental nodes along the larger pocket. The resulting state is consistent with the experiments on KFe_{2}As_{2}.

7.
Phys Rev Lett ; 112(14): 147002, 2014 Apr 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24766005

RESUMEN

Using a controlled weak-coupling renormalization group approach, we establish the mechanism of unconventional superconductivity in the vicinity of spin or charge ordered excitonic states for the case of electrons on the Bernal stacked bilayer honeycomb lattice. With one electron per site, this system, physically realized in bilayer graphene, is unstable towards a spontaneous symmetry breaking. Repulsive interactions favor excitonic order, such as a charge nematic and/or a layer antiferromagnet. We find that upon adding charge carriers to the system, the excitonic order is suppressed, and unconventional superconductivity appears in its place, before it is replaced by a Fermi liquid. We focus on firmly establishing this phenomenon using the renormalization group formalism within an idealized model with parabolic touching of conduction and valence bands.

8.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 5257, 2024 Jun 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38898060

RESUMEN

The recently introduced topological heavy fermion model (THFM) provides a means for interpreting the low-energy electronic degrees of freedom of the magic angle twisted bilayer graphene as hybridization amidst highly dispersing topological conduction and weakly dispersing localized heavy fermions. In order to understand the Landau quantization of the ensuing electronic spectrum, a generalization of THFM to include the magnetic field B is desired, but currently missing. Here we provide a systematic derivation of the THFM in B and solve the resulting model to obtain the interacting Hofstadter spectra for single particle charged excitations. While naive minimal substitution within THFM fails to correctly account for the total number of magnetic subbands within the narrow band i.e., its total Chern number, our method-based on projecting the light and heavy fermions onto the irreducible representations of the magnetic translation group- reproduces the correct total Chern number. Analytical results presented here offer an intuitive understanding of the nature of the (strongly interacting) Hofstadter bands.

9.
Science ; 371(6535): 1261-1265, 2021 03 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33737488

RESUMEN

Controlling the strength of interactions is essential for studying quantum phenomena emerging in systems of correlated fermions. We introduce a device geometry whereby magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene is placed in close proximity to a Bernal bilayer graphene, separated by a 3-nanometer-thick barrier. By using charge screening from the Bernal bilayer, the strength of electron-electron Coulomb interaction within the twisted bilayer can be continuously tuned. Transport measurements show that tuning Coulomb screening has opposite effects on the insulating and superconducting states: As Coulomb interaction is weakened by screening, the insulating states become less robust, whereas the stability of superconductivity at the optimal doping is enhanced. The results provide important constraints on theoretical models for understanding the mechanism of superconductivity in magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene.

10.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 5480, 2021 Sep 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34531383

RESUMEN

Magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene has recently become a thriving material platform realizing correlated electron phenomena taking place within its topological flat bands. Several numerical and analytical methods have been applied to understand the correlated phases therein, revealing some similarity with the quantum Hall physics. In this work, we provide a Mott-Hubbard perspective for the TBG system. Employing the large-scale density matrix renormalization group on the lattice model containing the projected Coulomb interactions only, we identify a first-order quantum phase transition between the insulating stripe phase and the quantum anomalous Hall state with the Chern number of ±1. Our results not only shed light on the mechanism of the quantum anomalous Hall state discovered at three-quarters filling, but also provide an example of the topological Mott insulator, i.e., the quantum anomalous Hall state in the strong coupling limit.

11.
Phys Rev Lett ; 99(4): 047002, 2007 Jul 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17678391

RESUMEN

The problem of dx2-y2-wave quasiparticles in a weakly disordered Abrikosov vortex lattice is studied. Starting with a periodic lattice, the topological structure of the magnetic crystal momenta of gapless fermions is found for the particle-hole symmetric case. If in addition the site centered inversion symmetry is present, both the location and the number of the gapless fermions can be determined using an index theorem. In the case of spatially aperiodic vortex array, Simon and Lee scaling is found to be violated due to a quantum anomaly. The electronic density of states is found to scale with the root-mean-square vortex displacement as sqrt[H]f(u2rms/xi2), while thermal conductivity is H independent, but different from the H=0 case.

12.
Nat Commun ; 6: 6518, 2015 Mar 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25758469

RESUMEN

Bogolyubov quasiparticles move in a practically uniform magnetic field in the vortex state of high-temperature cuprate superconductors. When set in motion by an externally applied heat current, the quasiparticles' trajectories may bend, causing a temperature gradient perpendicular to the heat current and the applied magnetic field, resulting in the thermal Hall effect. Here we relate this effect to the Berry curvature of quasiparticle magnetic sub-bands, and calculate the dependence of the intrinsic thermal Hall conductivity on superconductor's temperature, magnetic field and the amplitude of the d-wave pairing. The intrinsic contribution to thermal Hall conductivity displays a rapid onset with increasing temperature, which compares favourably with existing experiments at high magnetic field on the highest purity samples. Because such temperature onset is related to the pairing amplitude, our finding may help to settle a much-debated question of the bulk value of the pairing strength in cuprate superconductors in magnetic field.

13.
Phys Rev Lett ; 100(4): 046403, 2008 Feb 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18352311

RESUMEN

We argue that the unscreened Coulomb interaction in graphene provides a positive, universal, and logarithmic correction to scaling of zero-temperature conductivity with frequency. The combined effect of the disorder due to wrinkling of the graphene sheet and the long-range electron-electron interactions is a finite positive contribution to the dc conductivity. This contribution is disorder strength dependent and thus nonuniversal. The low-energy behavior of such a system is governed by the line of fixed points at which both the interaction and disorder are finite, and the density of states is exactly linear. An estimate of the typical random vector potential representing ripples in graphene brings the theoretical value of the minimal conductivity into the vicinity of 4e2/h.

14.
Phys Rev Lett ; 98(21): 216401, 2007 May 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17677790

RESUMEN

It is argued that the specific heat of N massless Dirac fermions in two spatial dimensions interacting with 1/r Coulomb interactions is suppressed logarithmically relative to its noninteracting counterpart. The (dimensionless) coefficient of the logarithm is calculated in a closed form in the leading order in large N expansion, but to all orders in the effective fine structure constant, alpha(F), a procedure which takes into account finite temperature screening. This effect is expected to occur in a single-layer graphene embedded in a dielectric medium. Its dependence on the dielectric constant is calculated analytically.

15.
Phys Rev Lett ; 97(26): 266406, 2006 Dec 31.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17280441

RESUMEN

The electrodynamics of single-layer graphene is studied in the scaling regime. At any finite temperature, there is a weakly damped collective thermoplasma polariton mode whose dispersion and wavelength-dependent damping is determined analytically. The electric and magnetic fields associated with this mode decay exponentially in the direction perpendicular to the graphene layer, but, unlike the surface plasma polariton modes of metals, the decay length and the mode frequency are strongly temperature-dependent. This may lead to new ways of generation and manipulation of these modes.

16.
Phys Rev Lett ; 96(16): 167005, 2006 Apr 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16712264

RESUMEN

We study analytically the low energy spectrum of a lattice d-wave superconductor in the vortex lattice state. For an inversion symmetric hc/2e vortex lattice and in the presence of particle-hole symmetry we prove an index theorem that imposes a lower bound on the number of zero-energy modes. Generic cases are constructed in which this bound exceeds the number of zero modes of an equivalent lattice of hc/e vortices, despite the identical point group symmetries. The quasiparticle spectrum around the zero modes is doubly degenerate and exhibits a Dirac-like dispersion, with velocities that become universal functions of Delta(0)/t in the limit of low magnetic field. For weak particle-hole symmetry breaking, the gapped state can be characterized by a topological quantum number, related to spin-Hall conductivity, which generally differs in the cases of the hc/2e and hc/e vortex lattices.

17.
Phys Rev Lett ; 91(23): 237001, 2003 Dec 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14683207

RESUMEN

We present finite temperature (T) extension of the (2+1)-dimensional QED (QED3) theory of under-doped cuprates. The theory describes nodal quasiparticles whose interactions with quantum proliferated hc/2e vortex-antivortex pairs are represented by an emergent U(1) gauge field. Finite T introduces a scale beyond which the spatial fluctuations of vorticity are suppressed. As a result, the spin susceptibility of the pseudogap state is bounded by T2 at low T and crosses over to approximately T at higher T, while the low-T specific heat scales as T2, reflecting the thermodynamics of QED3. The Wilson ratio vanishes as T-->0; the pseudogap state is a "thermal (semi)metal" but a "spin-charge dielectric." This non-Fermi liquid behavior originates from two general principles: spin correlations induced by "gauge" interactions of quasiparticles and fluctuating vortices and the "relativistic" scaling of the T=0 fixed point.

18.
Phys Rev Lett ; 93(18): 187002, 2004 Oct 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15525197

RESUMEN

Recent scanning tunneling microscopy experiments of Bi(2)Sr(2)CaCu(2)O(8+delta) have shown evidence of real-space organization of electronic states at low energies in the pseudogap state [Science 303, 1995 (2004)]]. We argue based on symmetry considerations as well as model calculations that the experimentally observed modulations are due to a density wave of d-wave Cooper pairs without global phase coherence. We show that scanning tunneling microscopy measurements can distinguish a pair density wave from more typical electronic modulations such as those due to charge density wave ordering or scattering from an on site periodic potential.

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