Microscopic theory of correlated states in Bernal bilayer graphene
ORAL
Abstract
The recent discovery of spin- and valley polarized states as well as superconductivity has established Bernal bilayer graphene (BBG) as a highly tunable platform to study the interplay of various strongly correlated states. The emergence of spin-polarized superconductivity close to spin(/valley magnetic states hints towards an unconventional mechanism. Using the supercell Wannierization technique presented in [arXiv:2407.02576], we build an ab-initio effective low-enery model for BBG at low electron/hole densities. We apply the functional renormalization group (FRG) to this model and characterize particle-hole and particle-particle instabilities emerging from repulsive Coulomb interactions in an unbiased way. By adding self-energies to the FRG flow and flowing into symmetry broken phases, we find spin/valley magnetism in line with experimental observations. Additionally, the FRG analysis predicts strong spin/valley fluctuations in vicinity to the magnetic states that drive spin-triplet superconductivity. Our results reinforce the picture of an electronic pairing glue in BBG.
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Publication: A. Fischer, T. O. Wehling, D. M. Kennes, R. Thomale and L. Klebl; in preparation.
Presenters
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Lennart Klebl
Universität Würzburg, University of Hamburg
Authors
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Ammon Fischer
University of RWTH-Aachen University
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Tim O Wehling
University of Hamburg
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Dante M Kennes
RWTH Aachen University
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Ronny Thomale
Julius-Maximilians University of Wuerzburg
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Lennart Klebl
Universität Würzburg, University of Hamburg