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Charge density waves (CDWs) and conventional superconductivity share similarities in that they are both collective phenomena that can arise from electron-phonon coupling, and they both can also be influenced by dimensionality and electron-electron interactions. The Crommie group is currently exploring these phenomena in different single-layer 2D materials, such as the transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) (materials of the form MX2, where M = transition metal and X = chalcogen) as well as bilayer systems (for more information on bilayer systems look here).
1D CDWs are most commonly described as a Peierls distortion, which arises from a combination of Fermi surface nesting and electron-phonon coupling that leads to the softening of a phonon at wavevector q = 2kF.1 This causes dimerization of the lattice and a charge distortion at q = 2kF as well as the opening of an energy gap at kF (Fig. 1).