A Two Dimensional Topological Electron Gas
ORAL
Abstract
The two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) is one of the paradigmatic examples of condensed matter but is fined-tuned in the sense that its Berry curvature exactly vanishes. This talk introduces a 2d topological electron gas (2TEG), a simple model of a band minimum whose potential/kinetic ratio rs and Berry curvature concentration λs are independently tunable. In the limit of vanishing Berry curvature, this model reduces to the standard 2DEG, with a Fermi liquid phase that transitions to a Wigner crystal at sufficiently large rs. If sufficient Berry curvature is added, the Wigner crystal undergoes a transition to an anomalous Hall crystal (AHC), a phase that spontaneously breaks translation symmetry to crystalize like the Wigner crystal, but also exhibits the integer quantum Hall effect. We will show conditions under which the AHC is stabilized beyond mean-field level, and discuss its first-order and continuous phase transitions. We will conclude by discussing its experimental relevance for rhombohedral graphene multilayers, where the AHC was originally proposed to explain the appearence of fractional quantum anomalous Hall effects.
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Presenters
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Daniel E Parker
University of California, San Diego, Harvard University
Authors
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Daniel E Parker
University of California, San Diego, Harvard University
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Junkai Dong
Harvard University
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Tomohiro Soejima
Harvard University, University of California, Berkeley