Abstract
A remarkable recent experiment has observed Mott insulator and proximate superconductor phases in twisted bilayer graphene when electrons partly fill a nearly flat mini-band that arises a `magic' twist angle. However, the nature of the Mott insulator, origin of superconductivity and an effective low energy model remain to be determined. We propose a Mott insulator with intervalley coherence that spontaneously breaks U(1) valley symmetry, and describe a mechanism that selects this order over the competing magnetically ordered states favored by the Hunds coupling. We also identify symmetry related features of the nearly flat band that are key to understanding the strong correlation physics and constrain any tight binding description. First, although the charge density is concentrated on the triangular lattice sites of the moir$\text{\'e }$ pattern, the Wannier states of the tight-binding model must be centered on different sites which form a honeycomb lattice. Next, spatially localizing electrons derived from the nearly flat band necessarily breaks valley and other symmetries within any mean-field treatment, which is suggestive of a valley-ordered Mott state, and also dictates that additional symmetry breaking is present to remove symmetry-enforced band contacts. Tight-binding models describing the nearly flat mini-band are derived, which highlight the importance of further neighbor hopping and interactions. We discuss consequences of this picture for superconducting states obtained on doping the valley ordered Mott insulator. We show how important features of the experimental phenomenology may be explained and suggest a number of further experiments for the future. We also describe a model for correlated states in trilayer graphene heterostructures and contrast it with the bilayer case.
Highlights
Superconductivity occurs proximate to a Mott insulator in a few materials
Once the valley symmetry is spontaneously broken, the physics at lower energy scales can be straightforwardly formulated in terms of a real-space honeycomb lattice tight-binding model with a dominant cluster-charging interaction and other weaker interactions
As discussed in previous sections, the ideas presented in this paper suggest a number of experiments which will be extremely useful in revealing the physics
Summary
Superconductivity occurs proximate to a Mott insulator in a few materials. The most famous are the cuprate high-Tc materials [1]; others include layered organic materials [2], certain fullerene superconductors [3], and some iron-based superconductors [4]. The superconductivity is readily suppressed in accessible magnetic fields—both perpendicular and parallel to the plane The observation of these classic phenomena in graphene gives new hope for theoretical progress in addressing old questions on Mott physics and its relationship to superconductivity. We argue that these Dirac crossings are protected by symmetries of the TBG system We show that this protection precludes finding a real-space representation of the nearly flat bands in terms of Wannier orbitals localized at the triangular moiresites, in contrast to natural expectations. Very recently, a heterostructure of ABCstacked trilayer graphene and boron nitride (TLG/hBN), which forms a triangular moiresuperlattice even at a zero twist angle, was studied [20] This system features nearly flat bands that are separated from the rest of the spectrum. We describe some properties of this model and suggest that this system offers a good possibility to realize novel kinds of quantum spin-orbital liquid states
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