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Effective Extended Bose-Hubbard Model for Helium on Graphene

ORAL

Abstract

The possibility of two-dimensional (2D) helium superfluidity mitigated by adsorption on novel 2D quantum materials, is an exciting development. For helium on graphene, superfluidity competes with insulating (1/3 filled) states, and the phase boundary between them is highly sensitive to the details of the van der Waals interactions between system components. We present a mapping of the full, complex many-body problem onto an effective extended Bose-Hubbard (t-V-V’) model, which describes how the Helium atoms hop (t) on the graphene lattice and interact at nearest-neighbor (V) and next-nearest neighbor (V’) sites. Helium atoms behave effectively as hard-core bosons (U=∞) and V/t controls the nature of the emergent many-body state. We compare the results of a variety of accurate techniques: large-scale Monte Carlo simulations, band structure calculations and ab-initio calculations on finite systems. We find that V/t is large enough across all techniques to favor the insulating 1/3-filled state. Therefore our effective model provides an accurate description which can be also used as a starting point in more complex situations where atomic and materials parameters are modified and consequently new phases could emerge.

Presenters

  • Jiangyong Yu

    The University of Vermont, University of Vermont

Authors

  • Jiangyong Yu

    The University of Vermont, University of Vermont

  • Mohamed Marwan Elsayed

    University of Vermont

  • Kenneth Shepherd Jr

    University of Vermont

  • Ethan Lauricella

    University of Vermont

  • Todd Lombardi

    University of Missouri, Columbia

  • Sang Wook Kim

    University of Vermont

  • Juan M Vanegas

    University of Vermont, Department of Physics, University of Vermont

  • Taras Lakoba

    University of Vermont

  • Carlos Wexler

    University of Missouri, University of Missouri, Columbia

  • Valeri Kotov

    University of Vermont, Department of Physics, University of Vermont

  • Adrian G Del Maestro

    The University of Tennessee, University of Tennessee, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Physics, University of Tennessee Knoxville, Department of Physics, University of Vermont