English

Localization and the Anomalous Hall Effect in a "Dirty" Metallic Ferromagnet

Materials Science 2010-07-14 v2

Abstract

We report magnetoresistance measurements over an extensive temperature range (0.1 K T\leq T \leq 100 K) in a disordered ferromagnetic semiconductor (\gma). The study focuses on a series of metallic \gma~ epilayers that lie in the vicinity of the metal-insulator transition (kFle1k_F l_e\sim 1). At low temperatures (T<4T < 4 K), we first confirm the results of earlier studies that the longitudinal conductivity shows a T1/3T^{1/3} dependence, consistent with quantum corrections from carrier localization in a ``dirty'' metal. In addition, we find that the anomalous Hall conductivity exhibits universal behavior in this temperature range, with no pronounced quantum corrections. We argue that observed scaling relationship between the low temperature longitudinal and transverse resistivity, taken in conjunction with the absence of quantum corrections to the anomalous Hall conductivity, is consistent with the side-jump mechanism for the anomalous Hall effect. In contrast, at high temperatures (T4T \gtrsim 4 K), neither the longitudinal nor the anomalous Hall conductivity exhibit universal behavior, indicating the dominance of inelastic scattering contributions down to liquid helium temperatures.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0808.2079,
  title  = {Localization and the Anomalous Hall Effect in a "Dirty" Metallic Ferromagnet},
  author = {P. Mitra and N. Kumar and N. Samarth},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0808.2079},
  year   = {2010}
}

Comments

Revised version of original submission. To appear in Phys. Rev. B

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:10:33.825Z