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Transverse voltage in anisotropic hydrodynamic conductors

ORAL

Abstract

In ultra-clean metals, weak momentum dissipation gives rise to non-Ohmic current flows, including both ballistic and hydrodynamic regimes. Hydrodynamic flow has gained attention for revealing electronic correlations and long-lived collective modes in quantum materials. However, distinguishing it from ballistic transport is difficult since both can show similar current distributions despite different underlying mechanisms. Using kinetic Boltzmann theory, we propose that the transverse channel voltage at zero magnetic field is an effective detector for hydrodynamic flow. The interplay between anisotropic fermiology and boundary scattering can lead to a characteristic sign change of the transverse voltage in certain materials systems.

Publication: Wang K, Guo C, Moll P J W, et al. Transverse voltage in anisotropic hydrodynamic conductors[J]. arXiv preprint arXiv:2409.16088, 2024

Presenters

  • Kaize Wang

    Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter

Authors

  • Kaize Wang

    Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter

  • Philip JW Moll

    Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter

  • Tobias Holder

    Tel Aviv University, Weizmann Institute of Science

  • Chunyu Guo

    Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter, Max Planck Institute for the Structure an Dynamics of Matter