565 research outputs found
Spin Degree of Freedom in a Two-Dimensional Electron Liquid
We have investigated correlation between spin polarization and
magnetotransport in a high mobility silicon inversion layer which shows the
metal-insulator transition. Increase in the resistivity in a parallel magnetic
field reaches saturation at the critical field for the full polarization
evaluated from an analysis of low-field Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations. By
rotating the sample at various total strength of the magnetic field, we found
that the normal component of the magnetic field at minima in the diagonal
resistivity increases linearly with the concentration of ``spin-up'' electrons.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, 6 eps-figures, to appear in PR
A New Liquid Phase and Metal-Insulator Transition in Si MOSFETs
We argue that there is a new liquid phase in the two-dimensional electron
system in Si MOSFETs at low enough electron densities. The recently observed
metal-insulator transition results as a crossover from the percolation
transition of the liquid phase through the disorder landscape in the system
below the liquid-gas critical temperature. The consequences of our theory are
discussed for variety of physical properties relevant to the recent
experiments.Comment: 12 pages of RevTeX with 3 postscript figure
Possible triplet superconductivity in MOSFETs
A theory that predicts a spin-triplet, even-parity superconducting ground
state in two-dimensional electron systems is re-analyzed in the light of recent
experiments showing a possible insulator-to-conductor transition in such
systems. It is shown that the observations are consistent with such an exotic
superconductivity mechanism, and predictions are made for experiments that
would further corroborate or refute this proposal.Comment: 4 pp., REVTeX, psfig, 1 eps fig, final version as publishe
Classical versus Quantum Effects in the B=0 Conducting Phase in Two Dimensions
In the dilute two-dimensional electron system in silicon, we show that the
temperature below which Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations become apparent is
approximately the same as the temperature below which an exponential decrease
in resistance is seen in B=0, suggesting that the anomalous behavior in zero
field is observed only when the system is in a degenerate (quantum) state. The
temperature dependence of the resistance is found to be qualitatively similar
in B=0 and at integer Landau level filling factors.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
Universality at integer quantum Hall transitions
We report in this paper results of experimental and theoretical studies of
transitions between different integer quantum Hall phases, as well as
transition between the insulating phase and quantum Hall phases at high
magnetic fields. We focus mainly on universal properties of the transitions. We
demonstrate that properly defined conductivity tensor is universal at the
transitions. We also present numerical results of a non-interacting electron
model, which suggest that the Thouless conductance is universal at integer
quantum Hall transitions, just like the conductivity tensor. Finite temperature
and system size effects near the transition point are also studied.Comment: 20 pages, 15 figure
Indication of the ferromagnetic instability in a dilute two-dimensional electron system
The magnetic field B_c, in which the electrons become fully spin-polarized,
is found to be proportional to the deviation of the electron density from the
zero-field metal-insulator transition in a two-dimensional electron system in
silicon. The tendency of B_c to vanish at a finite electron density suggests a
ferromagnetic instability in this strongly correlated electron system.Comment: 4 pages, postscript figures included. Revised versio
On the Theory of Metal-Insulator Transitions in Gated Semiconductors
It is shown that recent experiments indicating a metal-insulator transition
in 2D electron systems can be interpreted in terms of a simple model, in which
the resistivity is controlled by scattering at charged hole traps located in
the oxide layer. The gate voltage changes the number of charged traps which
results in a sharp change in the resistivity. The observed exponential
temperature dependence of the resistivity in the metallic phase of the
transition follows from the temperature dependence of the trap occupation
number. The model naturally describes the experimentally observed scaling
properties of the transition and effects of magnetic and electric fields.Comment: 4 two-column pages, 4 figures (included in the text
Comment on "Theory of metal-insulator transitions in gated semiconductors" (B. L. Altshuler and D. L. Maslov, Phys. Rev. Lett. 82, 145 (1999))
In a recent Letter, Altshuler and Maslov propose a model which attributes the
anomalous temperature and field dependence of the resistivity of
two-dimensional electron (or hole) systems to the charging and discharging of
traps in the oxide (spacer), rather than to intrinsic behavior of interacting
particles associated with a conductor-insulator transition in two dimensions.
We argue against this model based on existing experimental evidence.Comment: 1 page; submitted to PR
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