Superconductivity (SC) in twisted bilayer graphene (tBLG) has been explored by varying carrier concentrations, twist angles, and screening strength, with the aim of uncovering its origin and possible connections to strong electronic correlations in narrow bands and various resulting broken symmetries. However, the link between the tBLG band structure and the onset of SC and other orders largely remains unclear. In this study, we address this crucial gap by examining in situ band structure tuning of a near magic-angle (θ ≈ 0.95°) tBLG device with a displacement field () and reveal competition between SC and other broken symmetries. At zero , the device exhibits superconducting signatures without the resistance peak at half-filling, a characteristic signature with a strong electronic correlation. As increases, the SC is suppressed, accompanied by the appearance of a resistance peak at half-filling. Hall density measurements reveal that at zero , SC arises around the van Hove singularity (vHs) from an isospin or spin-valley unpolarized band. At higher , the suppression of SC coincides with broken isospin symmetry near half-filling with lifted degeneracy ( ∼ 2). Additionally, as the SC phase becomes weaker with , vHs shifts to higher fillings, highlighting the modification of the underlying band structure with the applied electric field. These findings, with recent theoretical study on SC in tBLG, highlight the competition, rather than being connected concomitantly, between SC and other orders promoted by broken symmetries.
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Phys Chem Chem Phys
March 2025
Tianjin Key Laboratory of Film Electronic & Communicate Devices, School of Integrated Circuit Science and Engineering, Tianjin University of Technology, Tianjin 300384, China.
Two-dimensional ferromagnetic materials have a broader development prospect in the field of spintronics. In particular, the high spin polarization system with half-metallic characteristics can be used as an efficient spin injection electrode. first-principles calculations, we predict that monolayer MnF has Dirac half-metallic properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
March 2025
Department of Physics, University of Houston, Houston, Texas 77204, USA.
We consider the quantum dynamics of a pair of coupled quantum oscillators coupled to a common correlated dissipative environment. The resulting equations of motion for both the operator moments and covariances can be integrated analytically using the Lyapunov equations. We find that for fully correlated and fully anti-correlated environments, the oscillators relax into a phase-synchronized state that persists for long-times when the two oscillators are nearly resonant and (essentially) forever if the two oscillators are in resonance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Nanotechnol
March 2025
Department of Quantum Matter Physics, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
Antiferromagnetic conductors with suitably broken spatial symmetries host spin-polarized bands, which lead to transport phenomena commonly observed in metallic ferromagnets. In bulk materials, it is the given crystalline structure that determines whether symmetries are broken and spin-polarized bands are present. Here we show that, in the two-dimensional limit, an electric field can control the relevant symmetries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
February 2025
Università di Parma, Dipartimento SMFI, and INFN Gruppo Collegato di Parma, Viale Giuseppe Pietro Usberti 7/A, 43100 Parma, Italy.
We examine the relation between supersymmetric localization on S^{4} and standard QFT results for nonconformal theories in flat space. Specifically, we consider 1/2 BPS circular Wilson loops in four-dimensional SU(N) N=2 supersonic Yang-Mills theories with massless hypermultiplets in an arbitrary representation R such that the β function is nonvanishing. On S^{4}, localization maps this observable into an interacting matrix model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNano Lett
March 2025
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117575, Singapore.
The anomalous Hall effect (AHE) is a transport phenomenon typically observed in ferromagnetic materials with broken time-reversal symmetry . Recently, the AHE has been observed in several archetype antiferromagnets (AFMs), including altermagnets, and AFMs with noncollinear, noncoplanar or canted Néel order, due to the breaking of joint symmetry of sublattice-transposing and time-reversal operation. However, the AHE is generally not allowed in collinear AFMs due to symmetry constraints.
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