APS Medal for Exceptional Achievement in Research: The Metal-Insulator Transition in Strongly Interacting Electron Systems in Two Dimensions
· Invited
Abstract
Over the course of my long career in physics my research has covered a variety of topics, including early measurements of the resistance minimum that provided the experimental key to the Kondo effect, metal-insulator transitions (MIT)s and macroscopic quantum tunneling of the magnetization in molecular magnets. My work during the last few years has focused on the apparent metal-insulator transition that occurs in strongly interacting systems of electrons in two dimensions, where no metallic behavior and no metal-insulator transition were believed to be possible. In this talk I will give a thumbnail history of research on the 2D metal-insulator transition, the debate concerning whether a metallic phase exists in two dimensions, and whether this MIT is a quantum phase transition, as claimed by many (including me). I will report surprising results [1] that shed new light on the nature of the metal-insulator transition in 2D.
[1] Shiqi Li, Qing Zhang, Pouyan Ghaemi and M. P. Sarachik, Phys. Rev. B 99, 155302 (2019).
[1] Shiqi Li, Qing Zhang, Pouyan Ghaemi and M. P. Sarachik, Phys. Rev. B 99, 155302 (2019).
*My research has been supported over the years by City College (CCNY), the PSC (Professional Staff Conference) through CUNYFRAP (the CUNY Faculty Research Award Program) and grants from the Department of Energy, the National Science Foundation, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the Army Research Office and the US-Israel Binational Science Foundation.
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Presenters
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Myriam Sarachik
- Physics, City College of New York, CUNY