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Heavy fermions, adapted from here. (a) At high temperatures, the conduction electrons are not well coupled to the unpaired local 4f moments. (b) At low enough temperatures, Kondo scattering hybridizes the f electrons with the conduction electrons, boosting the carrier density. (c) The hybridized energy-momentum relation is much flatter near the Fermi energy leading to a large effective mass. |
So, two key ingredients for heavy fermions are itinerant conduction electrons and a periodic array of comparatively localized, unpaired electrons that have magnetic moments. It turns out that this combination can also be achieved in moiré lattice materials. There are no \(f\) electrons here, but the moiré lattice can localize spins. Apologies for not linking to all the relevant papers, but a couple of key theory results are here, here, and here, and a key experimental result is here. The tunability of the 2D material-based systems is an excellent feature for digging down into the detailed physics.
Hi Doug:An addendum to your very nice post on heavy fermions, to draw attention to what I think were important experimental results: Frank Steglich’s 1979 Phys. Rev. Lett. 43, 1892–1896 reporting superconductivity in CeCu2Si2 and Louis Taillefer and Gil Lonzarich’s 1988 determination of the quasiparticle mass and fermi surface in UPt3.Prior to Steglich’s paper we knew that some rare earth/actinide intermetallics (e.g. CeAl3) had a very enhanced specific heat coefficient at low temperatures and that the entropy implied by this specific heat was derived from the magnetic moments of the rare earth ions. But while it was plausible, there was no direct evidence that this enhanced specific heat was associated with heavy-mass fermions, so the physical relevance of the Kondo lattice concept remained uncertain.Steglich observed that in CeCu2Si2 the specific heat jump at the superconducting transition (which in BCS theory is basically the same size as the electronic specific heat at Tc) was about as big as the normal state specific heat coefficient, thus showing that the spin entropy had been transmuted into something that could go superconducting. Then (I think in subsequent experiments) Steglich observed that the rest of the superconducting thermodynamics in Cecu2Si2 was also consistent with pairing of heavy mass entities. This, I believe, is what convinced everyone that the spin entropy from the rare earth moments had been converted into heavy mass electrons—in other words, that the lattice Kondo effect was real.A few years after this, Louis Taillefer and Gil Lonzarich’s quantum oscillation study of UPt3 (Phys. Rev. Lett. 60, 1570 ) showed indeed that the U-f electrons (which appear as local moments at higher temperatures) were included in the Fermi surface at low T and had heavy masses, providing direct experimental confirmation of the Kondo lattice concept.CheersAndy Millis

