Exotic transport phenomena in quantum materials from ab initio
ORAL
Abstract
Exotic transport phenomena provide a powerful way to probe excited states in quantum materials. Emergent signatures can arise when the length scales of momentum-relaxation/conservation for the nearly-free electron are comparable. There, the carriers flow collectively and the conventional diffusive transport description from textbook is not sufficient to fully capture the charge conduction in the hydrodynamic regime [1].
We use ab initio methods to investigate this exotic transport phenomenon. First, we focus on the electron-phonon interactions and show how they give rise to anomalous behaviors from both electron and phonon specifics in two prototypical semimetals WP2 and WTe2 [2-4]. We show that rapid e-ph scattering can lead to indirect electron-electron interactions, which conserves the total electron momentum. By solving the numerical BTE with the ab initio input, we demonstrate that the current density distribution in a thin long channel resembles a parabolic flow pattern [2,5]. Inspired by the recent space-resolved measurements, we characterize the different transport regimes in the parameter space of lmr, lmc, and w. Finally, we present predictions on candidates ZrSiS and TaAs2 and propose design principles to realize hydrodynamics in anisotropic metals and semimetals [6].
We use ab initio methods to investigate this exotic transport phenomenon. First, we focus on the electron-phonon interactions and show how they give rise to anomalous behaviors from both electron and phonon specifics in two prototypical semimetals WP2 and WTe2 [2-4]. We show that rapid e-ph scattering can lead to indirect electron-electron interactions, which conserves the total electron momentum. By solving the numerical BTE with the ab initio input, we demonstrate that the current density distribution in a thin long channel resembles a parabolic flow pattern [2,5]. Inspired by the recent space-resolved measurements, we characterize the different transport regimes in the parameter space of lmr, lmc, and w. Finally, we present predictions on candidates ZrSiS and TaAs2 and propose design principles to realize hydrodynamics in anisotropic metals and semimetals [6].
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Publication: 1 U. Vool, et al., Nat. Phys. (2021)<br>2 G. Varnavides, et al., arXiv:2106.00697 (2021)<br>3 Y. Wang, et al., arXiv:2109.00550 (2021)
Presenters
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Yaxian Wang
Harvard University
Authors
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Yaxian Wang
Harvard University
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Georgios Varnavides
Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI
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Prineha Narang
Harvard University