Quantum oscillations and current distribution in Cylindrical graphite

ORAL

Abstract

We experimentally investigate the Quantum oscillations on macroscopic cylindrical graphite to study the influence of geometry and magnetic field on the behavior of charge carriers. The magnetic field is applied perpendicular to the axis of the cylinder and the current is injected along the axis. The Landau quantization depends on the radial component of the magnetic field, which results in an angular dependence of the energy landscape on the surface of the cylinder. This in turn leads to a redistribution of charge carriers on the surface of the cylinder. The cylindrical graphite is modelled as a resistor network of strips of flat graphite. We show that the resistor network model qualitatively captures the quantum oscillatory features observed on cylindrical graphite and can predict the angular distribution of current on the surface. The experiments on the cylindrical graphite thus illustrates the interplay of geometry and magnetic field to control the spatial density of charge carriers in a solid state system.

*European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under Grant Agreement ID 829044 “SCHINES”.DFG-RSF (NI616 22/1): contribution of topological states to the thermoelectric properties of Weyl semimetals and SFB 1143

Presenters

  • Narayan Kunchur

    • MPI CPfS

Authors

  • Narayan Kunchur

    • MPI CPfS
  • Stanislaw Galeski

    • Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics
    • University Bonn
  • Fabian Menges

    • University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Tobias Meng

    • University of Dresden
    • TU Dresden
  • Rafal Wawrzynczak

    • Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids
    • MPI CPfS
  • Bernd Büchner

    • Leibniz IFW Dresden
    • Institute for Solid State Research, IFW Dresdenm Dresden, Germany
    • IFW
  • Claudia Felser

    • Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physic
    • Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids
  • Johannes Gooth

    • IBM Research - Zurich
    • University Bonn