Kondo Phase in Twisted Bilayer Graphene -- A Unified Theory for Distinct Experiments
Geng-Dong Zhou, Yi-Jie Wang, Ninghua Tong, Zhi-Da Song

TL;DR
This paper presents a unified theoretical framework explaining various phases in magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene, highlighting the role of Kondo physics and heavy Fermi liquids in gapless states and their relation to superconductivity.
Contribution
It introduces a topological heavy fermion model combined with advanced methods to unify understanding of experimental phenomena in MATBG, including gapless phases and superconductivity.
Findings
Gapless phases are heavy Fermi liquids with broken symmetries.
Kondo temperature is around 1 meV, influencing phase transitions.
Predicted Fermi surface shrinkage with heating as an experimental signature.
Abstract
A number of interesting physical phenomena have been discovered in magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene (MATBG), such as superconductivity, correlated gapped and gapless phases, etc. The gapped phases are believed to be symmetry-breaking states described by mean-field theories, whereas gapless phases exhibit features beyond mean field. This work, combining poor man's scaling, numerical renormalization group, and dynamic mean-field theory, demonstrates that the gapless phases are the heavy Fermi liquid state with some symmetries broken and the others preserved. We adopt the recently proposed topological heavy fermion model for MATBG with effective local orbitals around AA-stacking regions and Dirac fermions surrounding them. At zero temperature and most non-integer fillings, the ground states are found to be heavy Fermi liquids and exhibit Kondo resonance peaks. The Kondo temperature…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum and electron transport phenomena · Graphene research and applications · Rare-earth and actinide compounds
