Ferromagnetism and its stability from the one-magnon spectrum in twisted bilayer graphene

Abstract

We study ferromagnetism and its stability in twisted bilayer graphene. We work with a Hubbard-like interaction that corresponds to the screened Coulomb interaction in a well-defined limit where the Thomas-Fermi screening length lTF is much larger than monolayer graphene's lattice spacing lg lTF and much smaller than the Moir\'e super lattice's spacing lTF lMoir\'e. We show that in the perfectly flat band "chiral" limit and at filling fractions 3/4, the saturated ferromagnetic (spin and valley polarized) states are ideal ground states candidates in the large band-gap limit. By assuming a large enough substrate (hBN) induced sub-lattice potential, the same argument can be applied to filling fractions 1/4. We estimate the regime of stability of the ferromagnetic phase around the chiral limit by studying the exactly calculated spectrum of one-magnon excitations. The instability of the ferromagnetic state is signaled by a negative magnon excitation energy. This approach allows us to deform the results of the idealized chiral model (by increasing the bandwidth and/or modified interactions) towards more realistic systems. Furthermore, we use the low energy part of the exact one-magnon spectrum to calculate the spin-stiffness of the Goldstone modes throughout the ferromagnetic phase. The calculated value of spin-stiffness can determine the excitation energy of charged skyrmions.

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