Spin-resolved tunneling in the fractional quantum Hall effect regime

ORAL

Abstract

Strong Coulomb interactions and internal spin degrees of freedom lead to a plethora of correlated electronic phases in quantum Hall (QH) systems. Despite the successes of nuclear magnetic resonance and optical techniques, spin-sensitive measurements have remained challenging, particularly at low carrier density or in higher Landau levels (LLs). Here we introduce a new method, spin-resolved tunneling, that can probe the spin texture of both the ground and excited states of QH systems. We establish a complete phase diagram of the ground-state spin in a wide range of filling factors ν and magnetic fields. Our phase diagrams show the detailed structure of the composite fermion (CF) phases in the lowest LL, in which the changes in the Zeeman energy and ν drive phase transitions between the spin-unpolarized, the spin-polarized, and the topological spin skymion states. On the other hand, the non-Laughlin correlated behavior, such as the absence of spin transitions at ν = 2 + 1/2 and 2 + 2/3 states, is observed in the first excited LL, where the conventional CF picture is no longer valid due to the softened pair interactions.

*Funded by BES Program of the Office of Science of the US DOE, contract no. FG02-08ER46514, and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, through grant GBMF2931

Presenters

  • Heun Mo Yoo

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Heun Mo Yoo

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Loren Pfeiffer

    • Electrical Engineering, Princeton University
    • Princeton University
    • Princeton Univ
    • Department of Electrical Engineering, Princeton University
    • PRISM, Princeton University
    • Physics, Princeton University
    • Electrical Engineering, Princeton
  • Kirk Baldwin

    • Princeton University
    • Electrical Engineering, Princeton University
    • PRISM, Princeton University
  • Kenneth West

    • Electrical Engineering, Princeton University
    • Princeton University
    • Princeton Univ
    • Department of Electrical Engineering, Princeton University
    • PRISM, Princeton University
    • Physics, University of Pittsburgh
    • Electrical Engineering, Princeton
  • Raymond Ashoori

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology