Melting of a 2D quantum electron solid in high magnetic field

Author:  ["Yong P. Chen","G. Sambandamurthy","Z. H. Wang","R. M. Lewis","L. W. Engel","D. C. Tsui","P. D. Ye","L. N. Pfeiffer","K. W. West"]

Publication:  Nature Physics

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Tags:     Physics

Abstract

The melting temperature Tm of a solid is generally determined by its solid–liquid transition on being heated at a fixed pressure, usually ambient pressure. It is also determined indirectly by the density n by means of the equation of state. This remains true even for solid helium1, in which quantum effects often lead to unusual properties2. Here, we present experimental evidence to show that for a two-dimensional (2D) solid formed by electrons in a semiconductor sample under a strong perpendicular magnetic field3 (B), Tm is not controlled by n, but effectively by the quantum correlation between the electrons through the Landau level filling factor ν=n h/e B (where h is the Planck constant and e is the electronic charge). Such melting behaviour, different from that of all other known solids (including a classical 2D electron solid at zero magnetic field4), suggests the quantum nature of the magnetic-field-induced electron solid. Moreover, Tm increases with the strength of the sample-dependent disorder that tends to pin the electron solid in place.

Cite this article

Chen, Y., Sambandamurthy, G., Wang, Z. et al. Melting of a 2D quantum electron solid in high magnetic field. Nature Phys 2, 452–455 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys322

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