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Carrier transport theory for twisted bilayer graphene in the metallic regime

ORAL

Abstract

Understanding the normal-metal state transport in twisted bilayer graphene near magic angle is of fundamental importance as it provides insights into the mechanisms responsible for the observed strongly correlated insulating and superconducting phases. Here we provide a rigorous theory for phonon-dominated transport in twisted bilayer graphene describing its unusual signatures in the resistivity (including the variation with electron density, temperature, and twist angle) showing good quantitative agreement with recent experiments. We contrast this with the alternative Planckian dissipation mechanism that we show is incompatible with available experimental data. An accurate treatment of the electron-phonon scattering requires us to go well beyond the usual treatment, including both intraband and interband processes, considering the finite-temperature dynamical screening of the electron-phonon matrix element, and going beyond the linear Dirac dispersion. In addition to explaining the observations in currently available experimental data, we make concrete predictions that can be tested in ongoing experiments.

Publication: Nature Communications 12, 5737 (2021)

Presenters

  • Shaffique Adam

    Natl Univ of Singapore, National University of Singapore

Authors

  • Shaffique Adam

    Natl Univ of Singapore, National University of Singapore

  • Girish Sharma

    Indian Institute of Technology Mandi

  • Indra Yudhistira

    Natl Univ of Singapore

  • Nilotpal Chakraborty

    Max Planck Institute for Physics of Complex Systems, Dresden, Max Planck Institute for Physics of Comp

  • Derek Ho

    Natl Univ of Singapore

  • Mohammed M Al Ezzi

    Natl Univ of Singapore

  • Michael S Fuhrer

    Monash University

  • Giovanni Vignale

    University of Missouri