Quantum Geometry of Moiré Flat Bands Beyond the Valley Paradigm
Published in arXiv, 2026
Flat bands in moiré superlattices provide a fertile ground for correlated and topological phases, governed by their quantum geometric properties. While the valley-based paradigm captures key features in select materials, it breaks down in a growing class of systems lacking valley structure, where exotic phenomena such as twist-angle-tunable numbers of flat bands emerge. In this work, we develop and analyze tight-binding models for twisted heterobilayers of bipartite lattices, with a focus on the role of interlayer hybridization in generating flat-band quantum geometry. We demonstrate that sublattice-selective interlayer tunnelings in twisted dice lattice and graphene heterobilayers induce isolated flat bands at zero energy, whose number is tunable by the twist angle. Most importantly, these flat bands exhibit finite Berry curvature and a quantum metric of the Chern-insulator scale, generated through interlayer hybridization. This establishes a mechanism to induce quantum geometry in moiré flat bands beyond the valley paradigm. Our results chart a route to flat-band quantum geometry engineering in twisted bilayer bipartite lattices, with potential material realizations in oxide heterostructures, molecular lattices, and synthetic quantum matter.
Recommended citation: Xiaoting Zhou*, Yi-Chun Hung*, and Arun Bansil. Quantum Geometry of Moiré Flat Bands Beyond the Valley Paradigm arXiv:2603.20852.
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