Symmetry Origin of Lattice Vibration Modes in Twisted Multilayer Graphene: Phasons vs Moir\'e Phonons
Qiang Gao, Eslam Khalaf

TL;DR
This paper reveals a fundamental symmetry underlying lattice vibration modes in twisted multilayer graphene, unifying the concepts of Moiré phonons and phasons through symmetry analysis and effective field theory.
Contribution
It identifies a mismatch symmetry in twisted multilayer graphene that explains the origin of Moiré phonons and phasons, extending the understanding from bilayer to multilayer systems.
Findings
Moiré phonons and phasons are unified under a mismatch symmetry.
Effective field theory accurately describes collective modes in TBG.
Twisted mirror-symmetric trilayer graphene exhibits similar phonon modes with additional gapped modes.
Abstract
Lattice dynamics play a crucial role in the physics of Moir\'e systems. In twisted bilayer graphene (TBG), it was shown that, in addition to the graphene phonons, there is another set of gapless excitations termed Moir\'e Phonons [Phys. Rev. B, 075416, 2019] reflecting the lattice dynamics at the Moire superlattice level. These modes were later suggested to be phasons due to the incommensurate stacking of the two graphene layers [Phys. Rev. B, 155426, 2019]. In this work, we elucidate the equivalence of these two seemingly distinct perspectives by identifying an underlying symmetry, which we dub mismatch symmetry, that exists for any twist angle. For commensurate angles, this is a discrete symmetry whereas for incommensurate angles, it is equivalent to a continuous phase symmetry giving rise to phason modes. In the small angle limit, such symmetry becomes a continuous local symmetry…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGraphene research and applications · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Carbon Nanotubes in Composites
