English

Anisotropic, two-dimensional, disordered Wigner solid

Strongly Correlated Electrons 2022-07-15 v1 Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics Materials Science

Abstract

The interplay between the Fermi sea anisotropy, electron-electron interaction, and localization phenomena can give rise to exotic many-body phases. An exciting example is an anisotropic two-dimensional (2D) Wigner solid (WS), where electrons form an ordered array with an anisotropic lattice structure. Such a state has eluded experiments up to now as its realization is extremely demanding: First, a WS entails very low densities where the Coulomb interaction dominates over the kinetic (Fermi) energy. Attaining such low densities while keeping the disorder low is very challenging. Second, the low-density requirement has to be fulfilled in a material that hosts an anisotropic Fermi sea. Here, we report transport measurements in a clean (low-disorder) 2D electron system with anisotropic effective mass and Fermi sea. The data reveal that at extremely low electron densities, when the r_s parameter, the ratio of the Coulomb to the Fermi energy, exceeds 38, the current-voltage characteristics become strongly nonlinear at small dc biases. Several key features of the nonlinear characteristics, including their anisotropic voltage thresholds, are consistent with the formation of a disordered, anisotropic WS pinned by the ubiquitous disorder potential.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2207.06618,
  title  = {Anisotropic, two-dimensional, disordered Wigner solid},
  author = {Md. S. Hossain and M. K. Ma and K. A. Villegas-Rosales and Y. J. Chung and L. N. Pfeiffer and K. W. West and K. W. Baldwin and M. Shayegan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2207.06618},
  year   = {2022}
}