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Strong Temperature Dependence of the Quasi-Particle Tunneling between Quantum Hall edges Roberto D’Agosta University of Missouri - Columbia NEST-INFM Max Planck Institute for Physics of Complex Systems Cophen 04 - Dresden 25 June 2004 Outline I. Edge physics in the IQHE II. Edge physics in the FQHE: Chiral Luttinger Liquid III. Tunneling through a constriction IV. Conclusions The Quantum Hall Effect Y ) X 6 " 6( For small magnetic field one recovers the Classical Hall Effect H.L. Stormer, Physica B, vol. 177, pag 401, 1992 For certain large values of the magnetic field the Hall resistance shows large plateaus at exact quantized values... ...while the longitudinal resistance drops dramatically to zero! The Quantum Hall Effect The motion of a particle in a magnetic field is described by the solutions of a Harmonic Oscillator equation In the plateau region: !b Landau Levels h̄ 2 ! = eB eB !c = m 1 h RH = , R = 0 2 !b e is an integer or a fraction with an incredible precision! If !b If !b is a fraction we have the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect is an integer we have the Integer Quantum Hall Effect Edge states in IQHE The physical edges of the Hall bar bend the Landau levels Near the physical edges, 1D states are generated (edge states) The transport properties of the IQHE are explained in terms of the edge states The edge states exist also in the FQHE but their origin is due to the electron correlation! Luttinger Liquid model Two counter propagating modes with same velocity and linear dispersion g= ! vF +V1 +V2 vF +V1 −V2 E L R V2 V1 kF ! " z !"(x), !#(x1) = −i g $",#%x&(x − x1) Power law behavior of the density of states: the exponent is determined by the interaction constant k Wen’s theory of the edge states X.G. Wen PRB 41 12838 (1990), PRB 43 11025 (1991), PRB 44 5708 (1991) FQHE Gauge Invariance Egde modes action Boundary conditions Edge modes Density fluctuations in the boundary Kac-Moody algebra ! " i%b z !"#(x), !"$(x1) = − '#,$(x!(x − x1) 2& It will determine the single particle properties of the system! The filling factor enters the commutation relations Experiments on the Luttinger Liquid exponent M. Grayson, D.C. Tsui, L.N. Pfeiffer, K.W. West, and A.M. Chang PRL 80 1062 (1998) Tunneling from a 3D electron gas to an edge of the FQHE I !V ! 1 != "b The experiments clearly show that the Chiral Luttinger tunneling exponent varies continuously with the filling factor Edge states as hydrodynamical modes R. D’Agosta, R. Raimondi and G. Vignale PRB 90 (2003) Hydrodynamic approximation Lowest Landau Level projection q! ! 1 [!"(!r), !"(!r1)] Z= −i" #i j $i"0(!r)$ j !(!r −!r1) 2 HT = i, j ∈ {x, y} !"(r)V (r, r1)!"(r1) d!rd!r1 !t "#(!r,t) = " !i#0(!r)$i j 2 Z V (r, r1)"#(!r1,t) d!r1 The density fluctuations are located in the region where the equilibrium density has the large derivative Edge states as hydrodynamical modes II We integrate over the shaded region to define the edge excitation !"#(x) = Z # !, " ∈ {R, L} !"(x, y) dy y ! " %b z !"#(x), !"$(x1) = −i '#,$(x!(x − x1) 2& Z 1 H= 2 !"#(x)V#,$(x, x1)!"$(x1) dxdx1 Our edge excitations follow the same algebra of an interacting chiral Luttinger Liquid but we have not assumed the presence of a fully developed Quantum Hall phase Solution of the interacting Hamiltonian ! $b n † n∗ !"#(x) = bn'#(x) + bn'# (x) Bosonization: & 2% n>0 Eqn of motion: " !n (x) form an orthonormal and complete base for the Hilbert space Single Particle operators: • Define !"#(x) = $x%#(x,t) • Boson propagator D!,"(x, x1, #) = −2$i • Electron creation operator Z % 0 † !"(x) ! " i#t d#" &!(x,t), &"(x1, 0) #e e∗ 2# −i e $ %"(x) b = U"e Calculation of the conductance #2 Definition !Ii = " Gi j (V )!V j j #3 I I #1 Sum rules #4 #6 #5 ! Gi j = ! Gi j = 0 j i The conductances can be related to the boson propagator 2 ie Gi j = − h̄ lim D(xi, x j , %) ! $",i$#, j %→0 ",# V!,"(x, x1) = #(x − x1)V!," 2 !be Gi j = "(xi − xi+1) h The Constriction We model the constriction by assuming VR,R(x, x1) = VL,L(x, x1) = V1 ! V2 |x| > a VR,L(x, x1) = 1 V2 |x| < a We solve the eqn of motion with scattering boundary conditions and calculate the transmission and reflection coefficients V2 a L R 1 V2 V2 The presence of the constriction does not modify the response function at zero bias: we recover the exact quantization of the conductance Phenomenological theory of the tunneling HT = ! ! † "R(0)"L(0) + ∗ ! † "L(0)"R(0) - is assumed to be a phenomenological constant with no dependence on temperature or energy scale (we will reanalyze this assumption later!) - is due to the non complete localization of the states in the right or left edge In linear response theory: Rxx ! "#Im G (t, x) = − Z $ e ImG (t, 0)dt i#t − 0 † † "!L(t, x)!R(t, x)!R(0, 0)!L(0, 0)# Results for the tunneling between two edges If we remove the constriction we recover the Wen’s result 2"b−2 2"b−2 Rxx(T, 0) ! T , Rxx(0,V ) ! V X.G. Wen PRB 43 11025 (1991), C.L. Kane and M.P.A Fisher PRB 51 13449 (1995) The presence of the interaction renormalizes the exponent −2" !b → !be (tanh(2") 1 = V2 /V1) The presence of the constriction introduces two different behaviors (i.e. two characteristic exponents) in the time domain. The separation is given by the time an edge wave needs to travel trough the constriction. R. D’Agosta et al. PRB 90 (2003) Some experimental result Recently the tunneling between two edges of the same FQHE has been experimentally studied S. Roddaro et al. PRL 90 046805 (2003) dIT G= dVT 7 B=6 T At high temperature the peak seems agree with the theories dIT/dVT [µS] 6 5 4 3 To address this experimental result we focus on the tunneling amplitude! T=30 mk T=100 mK T=200 mK T=300 mK T=400 mK T=500 mK T=700 mK T=900 mK !b = 1/3 2 -3 -2 -1 0 V [mV] 1 2 At low temperature the deep is not expected! (Strong coupling) 3 Tunneling amplitude The tunneling can be due to the incomplete localization of the wave function in the edges The tunneling can be mediated by the presence of impurities that break down the translational invariance ! " !#R|#L" Being proportional to the superposition of wave functions belonging to different edges it is usually small and the tunneling is usually treated as a perturbation Tunneling amplitude All the electrons occupy the Lowest Landau level !" Z ∗ #R(!x)#L(!x) d2 − 4"2 d!x " e G A small variation of the edge distance affects significantly the tunneling amplitude! ϕL d D ϕR G Edge position: a simple model " F[n] = E[n] − T S[n] } d/2 In the incompressible region !(x) ≡ !b V(x) "="b x } ! In the compressible region U E[n] = 4!!2 Z n(x) dx + 2 Z kB S=− 2!!2 V (x)n(x) dx Z !(x) n(x) = 2"!2 "(x) ln "(x) + [1 − "(x)] ln[1 − "(x)] dx ! " ! "(x) F[n] = U"(x) +V (x) + kBT ln =µ !n(x) 1 − "(x) Edge position: a simple model II The edge position is determined by d(T ) = d(0) + 2x0(T ) !(x0) = !b Particle number conservation In the simplest case N= Z ! n(x) dx x0 V (x) = eE x kBT ln(1 − !b) x0(T ) = " 2 U !b kbT µ(T ) = µ(0) + [!b ln !b + (1 − !b) ln(1 − !b)] !b Edge position: a simple approach At zero temperature the edge position is determined by the minimization of the electrostatic energy D.B. Chklovskii et al. PRB 46 4026 (1992), PRB 47 12605 (1993) T != 0 minimize the free energy 1 2 2 F(d + !d) = F(d) + "d E(d)(!d) − T "d S(d)!d 2 !d " T Temperature dependence of the tunneling amplitude x0 (T )d(0) − !2 |!(T )| = |!(0)| e 2 2 ! = |!(0)| e 2 T /T0 " ! #b #be2 kBT0 = → T0 # 600 mK 2" | ln(1 − #b)| $bd G(0) = const × |!| T 2 T0 ! 140 mK 2"b−2 (!b = 1/3) !2 !meV !"2 25 20 15 10 T0 ! 400 mK 5 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 T !K" Recent experiments S. Roddaro et al. cond/mat 043318 (2004) ! " 2 ! #b #be kBT0 = 2" | ln(1 − #b)| $bd 25 T = 50 mK ! = 1/3 dV/dI(k#) 80 dV/dI(k#) 60 !=1 20 15 10 5 40 -80 !" = 1/5 -0.50 V -0.40 V 0 -0.32 V -0.26 V -0.20 V -0.18 V 80 V(µV) Vg = -0.60 V 20 0 !" = 1/4 !" = 2/7 -600 -400 -200 0 200 400 600 VT(µV) 800 Extensions • A better treatment of the electrostatic energy or a better approximation for the confining potential can improve the estimate for the temperature scale but we expect that it cannot modify the general scenario we have presented here • The presence of different chemical potentials in the edges implies a rigid shift of the edge positions thus leaving their distance untouched • For very small temperature the prediction of the RG is recovered because the tunneling amplitude goes to a constant Conclusions • The chiral luttinger liquid model can be used to study the phenomenology of the edge states of the FQHE • We have extended the previous theory in order to consider the possibility of continuous variation of the filling factor • We have then considered the dependence of the tunneling amplitude on geometrical factors and thus on temperature. Our results are in qualitative agreement with the available experimental data. Acknowledgments Roberto Raimondi (Universita’ di Roma Tre) Giovanni Vignale (University of Missouri) S. Roddaro V. Pellegrini F. Beltram } NEST-INFM PRA-Mesodyf NSF DMR-0313681 } Collaboration Experiments in Pisa } Financial Support