| Literature DB >> 32778647 |
Domenico Di Sante1, Johanna Erdmenger1, Martin Greiter1, Ioannis Matthaiakakis1, René Meyer1, David Rodríguez Fernández1, Ronny Thomale2, Erik van Loon3, Tim Wehling3.
Abstract
A current challenge in condensed matter physics is the realization of strongly correlated, viscous electron fluids. These fluids can be described by holography, that is, by mapping them onto a weakly curved gravitational theory via gauge/gravity duality. The canonical system considered for realizations has been graphene. In this work, we show that Kagome systems with electron fillings adjusted to the Dirac nodes provide a much more compelling platform for realizations of viscous electron fluids, including non-linear effects such as turbulence. In particular, we find that in Scandium Herbertsmithite, the fine-structure constant, which measures the effective Coulomb interaction, is enhanced by a factor of about 3.2 as compared to graphene. We employ holography to estimate the ratio of the shear viscosity over the entropy density in Sc-Herbertsmithite, and find it about three times smaller than in graphene. These findings put the turbulent flow regime described by holography within the reach of experiments.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32778647 PMCID: PMC7417536 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-17663-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1η/s as a function of the coupling strength.
Black line: prediction in the weak coupling regime, , reliable for small values of α. The red dashed line corresponds to the universal holographic value, . The blue shaded region, for which η/s is given by Eq. (2), represents the holographic prediction. This shaded region parametrizes the class of extrapolating models beyond the α → ∞ limit (see “Methods” section). Notice that Sc-Herbertsmithite (Sc-Hb) shows a much smaller variance than graphene (given by the vertical blue bars at α = 2.9 for Sc-Hb and α = 0.9 as a representative value for graphene, respectively), providing further support for the applicability of holographic methods to correlated Kagome metals.
Fig. 2First-principles analysis of Sc-Herbertsmithite.
a Top view of the crystal structure, where the CuO4 plaquettes form a Kagome lattice, as highlighted by the orange lines. b Ab-initio band structure of the low-energy manifold of Sc-Herbertsmithite along the high-symmetry directions of the conventional hexagonal Brillouin zone[21]. The dashed black lines refer to a linear fit around the Dirac point of Sc-Herbertsmithite, whereas the solid gray lines denote the counterpart for graphene. c Phonon dispersion of Sc-Herbertsmithite (gray lines) and relative distribution of the electron-phonon coupling strengths λ (blue circles, ν is the branch index, q the phonon momentum). The horizontal dashed line marks the temperature Tph above which optical phonon modes with sizeable λ are thermally activated.
Dirac fluid parameters.
| ED in vacuum | 2 × 103 | 1 | 1/137 |
| hBN/graphene/hBN | 6.6 | 2.2–4.0 | 0.5–1.0 |
| Sc-Herbertsmithite | 1.0 | 5.0 ± 0.5 | 2.9 ± 0.3 |
Fermi velocity vF, relative dielectric constant ϵr and fine-structure constant α for electrodynamics in vacuum, (hBN encapsulated) graphene and stochiometric Scandium-substituted Herbertsmithite.