Nematic superconductivity stabilized by density wave fluctuations: Application to twisted bilayer graphene

ORAL

Abstract

Nematic superconductors possess unconventional superconducting order parameters that spontaneously break rotational symmetry of the underlying crystal. In this work we propose a mechanism for nematic superconductivity stabilized by strong density wave fluctuations in two dimensions. While the weak-coupling theory finds the fully gapped chiral state to be energetically stable, we show that strong density wave fluctuations result in an additional contribution to the free energy of a superconductor with multicomponent order parameters, which generally favors nematic superconductivity. Our theory shades light on the recent observation of rotational symmetry breaking in the superconducting state of twisted bilayer graphene.

Presenters

  • Vladyslav Kozii

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Vladyslav Kozii

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Hiroki Isobe

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Jorn Venderbos

    Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania

  • Liang Fu

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT, Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology