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Transverse magnetic focusing as measurement tool for electron-electron interactions in GaAs/AlGaAs

ORAL

Abstract

The mesoscopic and ballistic phenomenon of transverse magnetic focusing (TMF) is investigated in a two-dimensional electron system in a high-mobility GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure at low temperatures 0.4 K < T < 20 K (electron mean free path ~ 68 μm at 4.2 K) using precision nonlocal measurements and high-resolution kinetic simulations. Measurements feature a distance between the injector and collector of 7 μm. The measured TMF amplitude of the nonlocal resistance plotted versus T shows a monotonic decrease as T is increased from 4.2 K to 20 K. A characteristic decay length is extracted by fitting experimental data with an exponential fit, and shows a 1/T2 dependence, indicating a dominant role for inelastic electron-electron interactions in limiting TMF amplitude. The simulations, which reveal both cyclotron orbits and current vortices, confirm the experimental observations and determine that the decay length relates to the momentum-conserving electron-electron scattering length. The combined experiments and simulations provide a direct way to measure the momentum-conserving scattering length in a TMF setting.

Presenters

  • Jean J. Heremans

    Physics, Virginia Tech, Virginia Tech

Authors

  • Jean J. Heremans

    Physics, Virginia Tech, Virginia Tech

  • Adbhut Gupta

    Virginia Tech

  • Gitansh Kataria

    Quazar Technologies Pvt. Ltd

  • Mani Chandra

    Quazar Technologies Pvt. Ltd

  • Saeed Fallahi

    Purdue University, Purdue Univ

  • Geoff C Gardner

    Department of Physics and Astronomy and Microsoft Quantum Purdue, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907 USA, Purdue University

  • Michael Manfra

    Purdue University, Purdue Univ, Department of Physics and Astronomy and Microsoft Quantum Purdue, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907 USA, Department of Physics and Astronomy and Station Q Purdue, Purdue University, Niels Bohr Institute, Microsoft Station Q, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 5, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Purdue University, Birck Nanotechnology Center and Microsoft Quantum Purdue, Purdue University