Evidence of the melting of Wigner crystals
ORAL
Abstract
Electron systems governed by Coulomb interaction manifest remarkable correlated phenomena among which a Wigner crystal (WC) has been a long-sought-after example. Because a WC is sustained by dominating Coulomb interaction, experimental observations require systems with ultra-low carrier densities (down to 109cm-2 or rs ∼40), a limit where interaction effect at such tiny energy scales is easily overwhelmed by disorder. As a result, a WC has not been previously demonstrated. Most detections made by transport and resonance techniques found only softly pinned modes that undergo second-order-like melting transition. Because the corresponding translational correlation length ξ is small, they are reasonably explained as intermediate/mixed phases.(i.e. hexatic and glass phases). Utilizing ultra-pure 2D systems, this study demonstrates for the first time nonlinear dc-IV results in rs>40 limit at T down to 10 mK. Enormous pinning characterized by GΩ resistance found below a critical temperature of Tc~30mK supports a WC on almost a macroscopic scale of ξ. The thermal melting follows a two-stage process resembling the Kosterlitz-Thouless model, except that a striking discontinuity appearing in the differential resistance at Tc suggests a first-order transition.
*NSF DMR-1410302
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Presenters
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Jian Huang
- Physics and Astronomy, Wayne State Univ