English

Moire superconductivity

Strongly Correlated Electrons 2020-04-01 v1 Superconductivity

Abstract

Recently, superconductivity was discovered at very low densities in slightly misaligned graphene multilayers. Surprisingly, despite extremely low electronic density (about 10410^{-4} electrons per unit cell), these systems realize strong-coupling superconductivity, with the transition temperature being a large fraction of the Fermi energy (Tc0.1ϵFT_c\sim 0.1 \epsilon_F). Here we propose a qualitative explanation for this remarkable phenomenon, highlighting similarities and qualitative differences with the conventional uniform high-density superconductivity. Most importantly, we find that periodic superimposed potential generically enhances local interactions relative to nonlocal (for instance, Coulomb) interactions. In addition, the density of states is enhanced as well, exponentially in modulation strength for low lying bands in some cases. Combination of these two effects makes moir\'e systems natural intermediate or strong-coupled superconductors, with potential for very high transition temperatures.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1911.05097,
  title  = {Moire superconductivity},
  author = {Ivar Martin},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1911.05097},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

10 pages, 1 figure