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Recent theoretical work predicted emergence of chiral topological superconducting phase with spontaneously broken time reversal symmetry in a twisted bilayer composed of two high-$T_c$ cuprate monolayers, such as Bi$_2$Sr$_2$CaCu$_2$O$_{8+delta}$. He re we identify large intrinsic Hall response that can be probed through the polar Kerr effect measurement as a convenient signature of the $mathcal{T}$-broken phase. Our modelling predicts the Kerr angle $theta_K$ to be in the range of 10-100 $mu$rad, which is a factor of $10^3-10^4$ times larger than what is expected for the leading chiral supercondutor candidate Sr$_2$RuO$_4$. In addition we show that the optical Hall conductivity $sigma_H(omega)$ can be used to distinguish between the topological $d_{x^2-y^2}pm id_{xy}$ phase and the $d_{x^2-y^2}pm is$ phase which is also expected to be present in the phase diagram but is topologically trivial.
A superconductor with $p_x+ip_y$ order has long fascinated the physics community because vortex defects in such a system host Majorana zero modes. Here we propose a simple construction of a chiral superconductor using proximitized quantum wires and t wist angle engineering as basic ingredients. We show that a weakly coupled parallel array of such wires forms a gapless $p$-wave superconductor. Two such arrays, stacked on top of one another with a twist angle close to $90^circ$, spontaneously break time reversal symmetry and form a robust, fully gapped $p_x+ip_y$ superconductor. We map out topological phases of the proposed system, demonstrate existence of Majorana zero modes in vortices, and discuss prospects for experimental realization.
A great variety of novel phenomena occur when two-dimensional materials, such as graphene or transition metal dichalcogenides, are assembled into bilayers with a twist between individual layers. As a new application of this paradigm, we consider stru ctures composed of two monolayer-thin $d$-wave superconductors with a twist angle $theta$ that can be realized by mechanically exfoliating van der Waals-bonded high-$T_c$ copper oxide materials, such as Bi$_2$Sr$_2$CaCu$_2$O$_{8+delta}$. On the basis of symmetry arguments and detailed microscopic modelling, we predict that for a range of twist angles in the vicinity of $45^{rm o}$, such bilayers form a robust, fully gapped topological phase with spontaneously broken time-reversal symmetry and protected chiral Majorana edge modes. When $thetaapprox 45^{rm o}$, the topological phase sets in at temperatures close to the bulk $T_csimeq 90$ K, thus furnishing a long sought realization of a true high-temperature topological superconductor.
324 - Oguzhan Can , Marcel Franz 2019
We propose a simple solvable variant of the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev (SYK) model which displays a quantum phase transition from a fast-scrambling non-Fermi liquid to disordered Fermi liquid. Like the canonical SYK model, our variant involves a single specie s of Majorana fermions connected by all-to-all random four-fermion interactions. The phase transition is driven by a random two-fermion term added to the Hamiltonian whose structure is inspired by proposed solid-state realizations of the SYK model. Analytic expressions for the saddle point solutions at large number $N$ of fermions are obtained and show a characteristic scale-invariant $sim |omega|^{-1/2}$ behavior of the spectral function below the transition which is replaced by a $sim |omega|^{-1/3}$ singularity exactly at the critical point. These results are confirmed by numerical solutions of the saddle point equations and discussed in the broader context of the field.
We consider a recent proposal for a physical realization of the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev (SYK) model in the zeroth-Landau-level sector of an irregularly-shaped graphene flake. We study in detail charge transport signatures of the unique non-Fermi liquid sta te of such a quantum dot coupled to non-interacting leads. The properties of this setup depend essentially on the ratio $p$ between the number of transverse modes in the lead $M$ and the number of the fermion degrees of freedom $N$ on the SYK dot. This ratio can be tuned via the magnetic field applied to the dot. Our proposed setup gives access to the non-trivial conformal-invariant regime associated with the SYK model as well as a more conventional Fermi-liquid regime via tuning the field. The dimensionless linear response conductance acquires distinct $sqrt{p}$ and $1/sqrt{p}$ dependencies for the two phases respectively in the low-temperature limit, with a universal jump at the transition. We find that corrections scale linearly and quadratically in either temperature or frequency on the two sides of the transition. In the weak tunneling regime we find differential conductance proportional to the inverse square root of the applied voltage bias $U$. This dependence is replaced by a conventional Ohmic behavior with constant conductance proportional to $1/sqrt{T}$ for bias energy $eU$ smaller than temperature scale $k_BT$. We also describe the out-of-equilibrium current-bias characteristics and discuss various crossovers between the limiting behaviors mentioned above.
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