2009 APS March Meeting
Volume 54, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 16–20, 2009;
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Session Y3: Multi-valley Electron Systems in the Quantum Limit
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Friday, March 20, 2009
Room: 301/302
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCMP
Chair: Wei Pan, Sandia National Laboratories
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.MAR.Y3.2
Abstract: Y3.00002 : Hall Plateaus at magic angles in ultraquantum Bismuth
8:36 AM–9:12 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Fauqu\'e Beno\^It
(Laboratoire Photon et Matiere)
The behaviour of a three-dimensional electron gas in the presence
of a magnetic field strong enough to put all carriers in the
first Landau level (i.e. beyond the quantum limit) is a
longstanding question of theoretical condensed matter physics
[1]. This issue has been recently explored by two high-field
experiments on elemental semi-metal Bismuth. In a first study of
transport coefficients (which are dominated by hole-like
carriers), the Nernst coefficient presented three unexpected
maxima that are concomitant with quasi-plateaux in the Hall
coefficient [2]. In a second series of experiments, torque
magnetometry (which mainly probes the three Dirac valley electron
pockets) detected a field-induced phase transition [3]. The full
understanding of the electron and hole behaviours above the
quantum limit of pure Bi is therefore still under debate. In this
talk, we will present our measurement of the Hall resistivity and
torque magnetometry with magnetic field up to 31 T and rotating
in the trigonal-bisectrix plane [4]. The Hall response is
dominated by the hole pockets according to its sign as well as
the period and the angular dependence of its quantum
oscillations. In the vicinity of the quantum limit, it presents
additional anomalies which are the fingerprints of the electron
pockets. We found that for particular orientations of the
magnetic field (namely ``magic angles''), the Hall response
becomes field-independent within the experimental resolution
around 20T. This drastic dependence of the plateaux on the field
orientation provides strong constraints for theoretical scenarios.
\\[4pt]
[1] Bertrand I. Halperin, \emph{Japanese Journal
of Applied Physics}, {\bf 26}, Supplement 26-3 (1987).\\[0pt]
[2] Kamran Behnia, Luis Balicas, Yakov Kopelevich,
\emph{Science}, {\bf 317}, 1729 (2008).\\[0pt]
[3] Lu Li, J. G. Checkelsky, Y. S. Hor, C. Uher, A. F.
Hebard, R. J. Cava, and N. P. Ong , \emph{Science}, {\bf 321},
5888 (2008).\\[0pt]
[4] Beno\^it Fauqu\'e, Luis Balicas, Ilya Sheikin, Jean Paul Issi
and Kamran Behnia, to be published
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.MAR.Y3.2