Hydrodynamic and ballistic transport over large length scales in GaAs/AlGaAs

ORAL

Abstract

Hydrodynamic and ballistic transport regimes are investigated through nonlocal resistance measurements and high-resolution kinetic simulations in a mesoscopic structure on a high-mobility 2D electron system in a GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure over a temperature range 4 K < T < 40 K, at zero magnetic field. The nonlocal measurements are performed in a large-scale (∼30 × 24 μm) ultraclean (electron mean free path ∼ 65 μm at 4.2 K) device, which by its scale offers exceptional sensitivity to electron-electron scattering, featuring 10 point contacts to probe voltages at various distances from the current injection contacts. The one-to-one simulations, involving the actual experimental geometry in the precise contact configuration, and taking into account both momentum relaxing and momentum conserving scattering, determine that the device transitions from a predominantly ballistic regime at T= 4.2 K to a hydrodynamic regime at T ≈ 10...15 K. The combined experiments and simulations reveal the existence of collective transport phenomena in both regimes, highlighting that negative nonlocal resistance and current vortices are not exclusive to the hydrodynamic regime.

*DOE DE-FG02-08ER46532 and DOE DE-SC0020138

Presenters

  • Adbhut Gupta

    • Virginia Tech

Authors

  • Adbhut Gupta

    • Virginia Tech
  • Jean J. Heremans

    • Physics, Virginia Tech
    • Virginia Tech
  • Gitansh Kataria

    • Quazar Technologies Pvt. Ltd
  • Mani Chandra

    • Quazar Technologies Pvt. Ltd
  • Saeed Fallahi

    • Purdue University
    • Purdue Univ
  • Geoff C Gardner

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy and Microsoft Quantum Purdue, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907 USA
    • Purdue University
  • Michael Manfra

    • Purdue University
    • Purdue Univ
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy and Microsoft Quantum Purdue, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907 USA
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy and Station Q Purdue, Purdue University
    • Niels Bohr Institute, Microsoft Station Q, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 5, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Purdue University
    • Birck Nanotechnology Center and Microsoft Quantum Purdue, Purdue University