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.
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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