English

Engineering Three Dimensional Moir\'e Flat Bands

Materials Science 2021-11-05 v2 Statistical Mechanics Strongly Correlated Electrons Superconductivity

Abstract

We demonstrate that the concept of moir\'e flat bands can be generalized to achieve electronic band engineering in all three spatial dimensions. For many two dimensional van der Waals materials, twisting two adjacent layers with respect to each other leads to flat electronic bands in the two corresponding spatial directions -- a notion sometimes referred to as twistronics as it enables a wealth of physical phenomena. Within this two dimensional plane, large moir\'e patterns of nanometer size form. The basic concept we propose here is to stack multiple twisted layers on top of each other in a predefined pattern. If the pattern is chosen such that with respect to the stacking direction of layers, the large spatial moir\'e features are spatially shifted from one twisted layer to the next, the system exhibits twist angle controlled flat bands in all of the three spatial directions. With this, our proposal extends the use of twistronic to three dimensions. We exemplify the general concept by considering graphitic systems, boron nitride and WSe2_2 as candidate materials, but the approach is applicable to any two-dimensional van der Waals material. For hexagonal boron nitride we develope an ab initio fitted tight binding model that captures the corresponding three dimensional low-energy electronic structure. We outline that interesting three dimensional correlated phases of matter can be induced and controlled following this route, including quantum magnets and unconventional superconducting states.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2012.09649,
  title  = {Engineering Three Dimensional Moir\'e Flat Bands},
  author = {Lede Xian and Ammon Fischer and Martin Claassen and Jin Zhang and Angel Rubio and Dante M. Kennes},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2012.09649},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

17 pages, 4 figures