3,141 research outputs found
Coulomb Ordering in Anderson-Localized Electron Systems
We consider an electron system under conditions of strong Anderson
localization, taking into account interelectron long-range Coulomb repulsion.
We have established that with the electron density going to zero the Coulomb
interaction brings the arrangement of the Anderson localized electrons closer
and closer to an ideal (Wigner) crystal lattice, provided the temperature is
sufficiently low and the dimension of the system is > 1. The ordering occurs
despite the fact that a random spread of the energy levels of the localized
one-electron states, exceeding the mean Coulomb energy per electron, renders it
impossible the electrons to be self-localized due to their mutual Coulomb
repulsion This differs principally the Coulomb ordered Anderson localized
electron system (COALES) from Wigner crystal, Wigner glass, and any other
ordered electron or hole system that results from the Coulomb self-localization
of electrons/holes. The residual disorder inherent to COALES is found to bring
about a multi-valley ground-state degeneration akin to that in spin glass. With
the electron density increasing, COALES is revealed to turn into Wigner glass
or a glassy state of a Fermi-glass type depending on the width of the random
spread of the electron levels.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX 2.09, To appear in Phys.Rev B Rapid Communications,
The abstract and the Introduction have been written anew to stress a
principal difference between a new macroscopical state predicted in the paper
and Wigner crystal or Wigner glass, some notations have been change
Possible evidence of a spontaneous spin-polarization in mesoscopic 2D electron systems
We have experimentally studied the non-equilibrium transport in low-density
clean 2D electron systems at mesoscopic length scales. At zero magnetic field
(B), a double-peak structure in the non-linear conductance was observed close
to the Fermi energy in the localized regime. From the behavior of these peaks
at non-zero B, we could associate them to the opposite spin states of the
system, indicating a spontaneous spin polarization at B = 0. Detailed
temperature and disorder dependence of the structure shows that such a
splitting is a ground state property of the low-density 2D systems.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Activation mechanisms in sodium-doped Silicon MOSFETs
We have studied the temperature dependence of the conductivity of a silicon
MOSFET containing sodium ions in the oxide above 20 K. We find the impurity
band resulting from the presence of charges at the silicon-oxide interface is
split into a lower and an upper band. We have observed activation of electrons
from the upper band to the conduction band edge as well as from the lower to
the upper band. A possible explanation implying the presence of Hubbard bands
is given.Comment: published in J. Phys. : Condens. Matte
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