Symmetry-based classification of exact flat bands in single and bilayer moiré systems

ORAL

Abstract

We study the influence of spatial symmetries on the appearance and the number of exact flat bands (FBs) in single and bilayer systems with Dirac or quadratic band crossing points, and systematically classify all possible number of exact flat bands in systems with different point group symmetries. We find that a maximum of 6 FBs can be protected by symmetries, and show an example of 6 FBs in a system with QBCP under periodic strain field of C6v point group symmetry. All known examples of exact FBs in single and bilayer systems fall under this classification, including chiral twisted bilayer graphene, and new examples of exact FBs are found. We show the construction of wavefunctions for the highly degenerate FBs, and prove that any such set of FBs are Z2 nontrivial, where all WFs polarized on one sublattice together have Chern number C = 1 and WFs polarized on the other sublattice together have C = -1. These bands also satisfy ideal non-Abelian quantum geometry condition. We further show that, just like in TBG, topological heavy fermion description of the FBs with higher degeneracy is possible as long as the Berry curvature distribution is peaked around a point in the Brillouin zone.

* This work was supported in part by Air Force Office of Scientific Research MURI FA9550-23-1-0334 and the Office of Naval Research MURI N00014-20-1-2479 (XW, SS and KS) and Award N00014-21-1-2770 (XW and KS), and by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Award GBMF10694 (KS). The work at LANL (SZL) was carried out under the auspices of the U.S. DOE NNSA under contract No. 89233218CNA000001 through the LDRD Program, and was performed, in part, at the Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies, and Office of Science User Facility operated for the U.S. DOE Office of Science, under user proposals #2018BU0010 and #2018BU0083.

Publication: arXiv:2310.02218

Presenters

  • Siddhartha Sarkar

    University of Michigan

Authors

  • Siddhartha Sarkar

    University of Michigan

  • Xiaohan Wan

    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

  • Shizeng Lin

    Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamous National Laboratory

  • Kai Sun

    University of Michigan