76 research outputs found

    Theory of Anomalous Quantum Hall Effects in Graphene

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    Recent successes in manufacturing of atomically thin graphite samples (graphene) have stimulated intense experimental and theoretical activity. The key feature of graphene is the massless Dirac type of low-energy electron excitations. This gives rise to a number of unusual physical properties of this system distinguishing it from conventional two-dimensional metals. One of the most remarkable properties of graphene is the anomalous quantum Hall effect. It is extremely sensitive to the structure of the system; in particular, it clearly distinguishes single- and double-layer samples. In spite of the impressive experimental progress, the theory of quantum Hall effect in graphene has not been established. This theory is a subject of the present paper. We demonstrate that the Landau level structure by itself is not sufficient to determine the form of the quantum Hall effect. The Hall quantization is due to Anderson localization which, in graphene, is very peculiar and depends strongly on the character of disorder. It is only a special symmetry of disorder that may give rise to anomalous quantum Hall effects in graphene. We analyze the symmetries of disordered single- and double-layer graphene in magnetic field and identify the conditions for anomalous Hall quantization.Comment: 13 pages (article + supplementary material), 5 figure

    Electron transport in disordered graphene

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    We study electron transport properties of a monoatomic graphite layer (graphene) with different types of disorder. We show that the transport properties of the system depend strongly on the character of disorder. Away from half filling, the concentration dependence of conductivity is linear in the case of strong scatterers, in line with recent experimental observations, and logarithmic for weak scatterers. At half filling the conductivity is of the order of e^2/h if the randomness preserves one of the chiral symmetries of the clean Hamiltonian; otherwise, the conductivity is strongly affected by localization effects.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figure

    Prognostic Significance of the Integral Index of the Alcohol Situation in Assessing Regional Differences in Mortality from Cardiovascular Diseases in the Russian Federation

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    Aim. To evaluate the stability of the integral index of the alcohol situation in the regions of the Russian and its prognostic significance regarding adult mortality from diseases of the circulatory system.Material and methods. The dynamics of standardized mortality rate for cardiovascular diseases (CVD) and TM in 2012 and 2018 in regions of Russia with safe and unsafe alcohol situations was analyzed. The average group mortality rate were evaluated, as well as the average rate of dynamics of the indicator reduction for the period from 2012 to 2018.Results. In 2012, differences in the rates of total mortality, as well as mortality from CSD, IHD, and CVD in regions with different levels of alcohol wellbeing were significant with a significance level of p <0.05. In 2018, intergroup differences in mortality from CSD and IHD were unreliable. Differences in average mortality rates from other causes significantly differed with a significance level of p <0.05. Total mortality and mortality from CVD, including individual forms, decreased in all regions, regardless of the level of alcohol well-being. The average rate of decline in mortality in the group of regions with an unfavorable situation was lower than the same indicator in regions with a favorable situation, with the exception of mortality from CVD. The most pronounced were differences between regions in the rate of decline in mortality from MI (p <0.05). For the remaining causes of death, the differences were not significant.Conclusion. The hypothesis of a significant contribution of the alcohol factor to cardiovascular mortality is confirmed. In the groups of regions that differ in the integral index of the alcohol situation, significant differences were noted in the indicators of both total mortality and mortality from the main groups of cardiovascular diseases. These differences persist over time, which confirms the hypothesis that the proposed integral indicator can be used for a long-term forecast of the influence of the alcohol situation on public indicators

    Quantum corrections to the conductivity and Hall coefficient of a 2D electron gas in a dirty AlGaAs/GaAs/AlGaAs quantum well: transition from diffusive to ballistic regime

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    We report an experimental study of the quantum corrections to the longitudinal conductivity and the Hall coefficient of a low mobility, high density two-dimensional two-dimensional electron gas in a AlGaAs/GaAs/AlGaAs quantum well in a wide temperature range (1.5 K - 110 K). This temperature range covers both the diffusive and the ballistic interaction regimes for our samples. It was therefore possible to study the crossover region for the longitudinal conductivity and the Hall effect

    Quantum conductivity corrections in two dimensional long-range disordered systems with strong spin-orbit splitting of electron spectrum

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    We study quantum corrections to conductivity in a 2D system with a smooth random potential and strong spin-orbit splitting of the spectrum. We show that the interference correction is positive and down to the very low temperature can exceed the negative correction related to electron-electron interactions. We discuss this result in the context of the problem of the metal-insulator transition in Si-MOSFET structures.Comment: 8 pages, no figure

    Interference induced metallic-like behavior of a two-dimensional hole gas in asymmetric GaAs/Inx_{x}Ga1x_{1-x}As/GaAs quantum well

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    The temperature and magnetic field dependences of the conductivity of the heterostructures with asymmetric Inx_xGa1x_{1-x}As quantum well are studied. It is shown that the metallic-like temperature dependence of the conductivity observed in the structures investigated is quantitatively understandable within the whole temperature range, T=0.420T=0.4-20 K. It is caused by the interference quantum correction at fast spin relaxation for 0.4 K<T<1.5 < T < 1.5 K. At higher temperatures, 1.5 K<T<4<T<4 K, it is due to the interaction quantum correction. Finally, at T>46T>4-6 K, the metallic-like behavior is determined by the phonon scattering.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Ballistic transport in disordered graphene

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    An analytic theory of electron transport in disordered graphene in a ballistic geometry is developed. We consider a sample of a large width W and analyze the evolution of the conductance, the shot noise, and the full statistics of the charge transfer with increasing length L, both at the Dirac point and at a finite gate voltage. The transfer matrix approach combined with the disorder perturbation theory and the renormalization group is used. We also discuss the crossover to the diffusive regime and construct a ``phase diagram'' of various transport regimes in graphene.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figure

    Coulomb drag between ballistic quantum wires

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    We develop a kinetic equation description of Coulomb drag between ballistic one-dimensional electron systems, which enables us to demonstrate that equilibration processes between right- and left-moving electrons are crucially important for establishing dc drag. In one-dimensional geometry, this type of equilibration requires either backscattering near the Fermi level or scattering with small momentum transfer near the bottom of the electron spectrum. Importantly, pairwise forward scattering in the vicinity of the Fermi surface alone is not sufficient to produce a nonzero dc drag resistivity ρD\rho_{\rm D}, in contrast to a number of works that have studied Coulomb drag due to this mechanism of scattering before. We show that slow equilibration between two subsystems of electrons of opposite chirality, "bottlenecked" by inelastic collisions involving cold electrons near the bottom of the conduction band, leads to a strong suppression of Coulomb drag, which results in an activation dependence of ρD\rho_{\rm D} on temperature---instead of the conventional power law. We demonstrate the emergence of a drag regime in which ρD\rho_{\rm D} does not depend on the strength of interwire interactions, while depending strongly on the strength of interactions inside the wires.Comment: 41 pages, 11 figures, more extended discussion, figures adde

    Interaction effects on magnetooscillations in a two-dimensional electron gas

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    Motivated by recent experiments, we study the interaction corrections to the damping of magnetooscillations in a two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG). We identify leading contributions to the interaction-induced damping which are induced by corrections to the effective mass and quantum scattering time. The damping factor is calculated for Coulomb and short-range interaction in the whole range of temperatures, from the ballistic to the diffusive regime. It is shown that the dominant effect is that of the renormalization of the effective electron mass due to the interplay of the interaction and impurity scattering. The results are relevant to the analysis of experiments on magnetooscillations (in particular, for extracting the value of the effective mass) and are expected to be useful for understanding the physics of a high-mobility 2DEG near the apparent metal-insulator transition.Comment: 24 pages; subsection adde

    Effect of spin on electron motion in a random magnetic field

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    We consider properties of a two-dimensional electron system in a random magnetic field. It is assumed that the magnetic field not only influences orbital electron motion but also acts on the electron spin. For calculations, we suggest a new trick replacing the initial Hamiltonian by a Dirac Hamiltonian. This allows us to do easily a perturbation theory and derive a supermatrix sigma model, which takes a form of the conventional sigma model with the unitary symmetry. Using this sigma model we calculate several correlation functions including a spin-spin correlation function. As compared to the model without spin, we get different expressions for the single-particle lifetime and the transport time. The diffusion constant turns out to be 2 times smaller than the one for spinless particles.Comment: 7 pages, revtex, result of the spin correlation function corrected, Appendix adde
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