The Composite Fermi Sea of Aluminum Arsenide

POSTER

Abstract

We study two-component electrons in the lowest Landau level at total filling factor 1/2 with anisotropic mass tensors whose principal axes are rotated by π / 2 as realized in Aluminum Arsenide (AlAs) quantum wells. Combining exact diagonalization and the density matrix renormalization group we demonstrate that the system undergoes a quantum phase transition from a gapless state in which both flavors are equally populated to another gapless state in which all the electrons spontaneously polarize into a single flavor as a function of mass anisotropy. We propose that this phase transition is a form of itinerant Stoner transition between a two-component and a single-component composite fermi sea states and describe a set of trial wavefunctions which successfully capture the quantum numbers and shell filling effects in finite size systems as well as providing a physical picture for the energetics of these states. Our estimates indicate that the composite fermi sea state in AlAs is indeed a fully polarized itinerant Stoner-type magnet.

*Z.Z. and L.F. are supported by the David and Lucile Packard foundation. D.N. Sheng is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences under grants No. DE-FG02-06ER46305.

Presenters

  • Zheng Zhu

    • Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Zheng Zhu

    • Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Inti Sodemann

    • Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems
  • Donna Sheng

    • Cal State Univ - Northridge
    • Department of Physics & Astronomy, California State University, Northridge
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, California State University
  • Liang Fu

    • Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT
    • Physics, Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT
    • Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • Physics, Massachusetts Inst of Technology
    • Physics, MIT
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • MIT