Effect of superconductivity on the shape of flat bands
Abstract
For the first time, basing both on experimental facts and our theoretical consideration, we show that Fermi systems with flat bands should be tuned with the superconducting state. Experimental measurements on magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene of the Fermi velocity VF as a function of the temperature Tc of superconduction phase transition have revealed VF Tc 1/Ns(0), where Ns(0) is the density of states at the Fermi level. We show that the high-Tc compounds Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x exhibit the same behavior. Such observation is a challenge to theories of high-Tc superconductivity, since VF is negatively correlated with Tc, for Tc 1/VF Ns(0). We show that the theoretical idea of forming flat bands in strongly correlated Fermi systems can explain this behavior and other experimental data collected on both Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x and twisted bilayer graphene. Our findings place stringent constraints on theories describing the nature of high-Tc superconductivity and the deformation of flat band by the superconducting phase transition.
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