Thermodynamic signatures of the field-induced states of graphite

ORAL

Abstract

When a magnetic field confines the carriers of a Fermi sea to their lowest Landau level, electron-electron interactions are expected to play a significant role in determining the electronic ground state. Graphite is known to host a sequence of magnetic field-induced states driven by such interactions. Three decades after their discovery, thermodynamic signatures of these instabilities are still elusive. Here, we report the first detection of these transitions with sound velocity measurements. The evolution of elastic constant anomalies with temperature and magnetic field allows to draw a detailed phase diagram which shows that the ground state evolves in a sequence thermodynamic phase transitions. Our analysis indicates that the electron-electron interaction is not the sole driving force of these transitions and that lattice degrees of freedom play an important role.

*This work is supported by the Agence Nationale de Recherche as a part of the QUANTUMLIMIT project, and as part of the UNESCOS project (contract ANR-14-CE05-0007). We acknowledge support from the LNCMI and the HFML which are both members of the EMFL.

Presenters

  • Benoit Fauque

    • Laboratoire Physique et Etude de Matériaux (UMR 8213 CNRS-ESPCI)
    • 10 Rue Vauquelin, ESPCI
    • ESPCI, LPEM CNRS

Authors

  • David LeBoeuf

    • LNCMI-G
  • Willem Rischau

    • Laboratoire Physique et Etude de Matériaux (UMR 8213 CNRS-ESPCI)
    • 10 Rue Vauquelin, ESPCI
    • ESPCI, LPEM CNRS
  • Gabriel Seyfarth

    • LNCMI-G
  • Robert Robert Kuechler

    • Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids
  • Martin Berben

    • HFML
  • Steffen Wiedmann

    • HFML
  • Wojciech Tabis

    • LNCMI-T
  • Medhi Frachet

    • LNCMI-G
  • Kamran Behnia

    • Laboratoire Physique et Etude de Matériaux (UMR 8213 CNRS-ESPCI)
    • Laboratoire de Physique Et d’Etude des Matériaux (UPMC-CNRS), ESPCI Paris
    • 10 Rue Vauquelin, ESPCI
    • ESPCI, LPEM CNRS
  • Benoit Fauque

    • Laboratoire Physique et Etude de Matériaux (UMR 8213 CNRS-ESPCI)
    • 10 Rue Vauquelin, ESPCI
    • ESPCI, LPEM CNRS