Classical elements in the magnetoconductance of two-dimensional Lorentz gases
ORAL
Abstract
Electrons moving through an array of identically shaped obstacles at random positions form a Lorentz gas. [1] In two-dimensional systems, strong deviations of the magnetoresistance from the Boltzmann model are observed experimentally and in numerical simulations, which have a classical origin. At low magnetic fields, memory effects [2] cause subdiffusive transport, which generates a strong positive magnetoconductivity, while weak localization is absent. At intermediate magnetic fields, the transport develops a superdiffusive character, which is visible as a pronounced maximum in the magnetoconductance at sufficiently large obstacle densities. [3] In dilute two-dimensional Lorentz gases, the interplay between the Lorentz obstacles and the residual background disorder causes strong corrections to the behavior of a clean Lorentz gas.
*[1] H. Lorentz, Proc. R. Acad. Sci. Amsterdam 7, 438 (1905).
[2] A. Dmitriev et al., Rev. Mod. Phys. 84, 1709 (2012).
[3] N. H. Siboni et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 120, 056601, (2018).
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Presenters
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Beate Horn-Cosfeld
- Condensed Matter Physics, Heinrich-Heine Univeristät Düsseldorf