Fractal non-Fermi liquids from Moire-Hofstadter phonons

2020 
We theoretically explore 2d Moire heterostructures in lattice-commensurate magnetic fields as platforms for quantum simulation of a paradigmatic model of non-Fermi liquid physics: a Fermi-surface coupled to a fluctuating gauge field. In these Moire-Hofstadter (MH) systems, long-wavelength acoustic phonons exhibit singular interactions with electrons analogous to those of electrons with 2d gauge fields. This leads to a breakdown of Fermi-liquid theory at low temperatures. We show that a combination of large Moire-unit cell size, tunable Fermi-surface topology, and enhanced coupling to interlayer sliding modes, enhance these effects by over many orders-of-magnitude compared to bulk crystals, placing them within experimental reach. Though we find that the asymptotic low-temperature non-Fermi liquid regime remains at prohibitively low temperatures, striking precursor non-Fermi liquid signatures can be observed, and we propose surface acoustic wave attenuation and quantum oscillation transport experiments. We also study the motion of MH acoustic-polarons, which we predict exhibit logarithmically diverging effective mass and unconventional magnetic field scaling for scaling of cyclotron resonance frequency and quantum oscillation amplitude.
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