246 research outputs found

    Pseudo-magnetoexcitons in strained graphene bilayers without external magnetic fields

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    The structural and electronic properties of graphene leads its charge carriers to behave like relativistic particles, which is described by a Dirac-like Hamiltonian. Since graphene is a monolayer of carbon atoms, the strain due to elastic deformations will give rise to so-called `pseudomagnetic fields (PMF)' in graphene sheet, and that has been realized experimentally in strained graphene sample. Here we propose a realistic strained graphene bilayer (SGB) device to detect the pseudo-magnetoexcitons (PME) in the absence of external magnetic field. The carriers in each graphene layer suffer different strong PMFs due to strain engineering, which give rise to Landau quantization. The pseudo-Landau levels (PLLs) of electron-hole pair under inhomogeneous PMFs in SGB are analytically obtained in the absence of Coulomb interactions. Based on the general analytical optical absorption selection rule for PME, we show that the optical absorption spectrums can interpret the corresponding formation of Dirac-type PME. We also predict that in the presence of inhomogeneous PMFs, the superfluidity-normal phase transition temperature of PME is greater than that under homogeneous PMFs.}Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure

    Stability of Sarma phases in density imbalanced electron-hole bilayer systems

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    We study excitonic condensation in an electron-hole bilayer system with unequal layer densities at zero temperature. Using mean-field theory we solve the BCS gap equations numerically and investigate the effects of intra-layer interactions. We analyze the stability of the Sarma phase with \bk,-\bk pairing by calculating the superfluid mass density and also by checking the compressibility matrix. We find that with bare Coulomb interactions the superfluid density is always positive in the Sarma phase, due to a peculiar momentum structure of the gap function originating from the singular behavior of the Coulomb potential at zero momentum and the presence of a sharp Fermi surface. Introducing a simple model for screening, we find that the superfluid density becomes negative in some regions of the phase diagram, corresponding to an instability towards a Fulde-Ferrel-Larkin-Ovchinnikov (FFLO) type superfluid phase. Thus, intra-layer interaction and screening together can lead to a rich phase diagram in the BCS-BEC crossover regime in electron-hole bilayer systems

    Interaction and disorder in bilayer counterflow transport at filling factor one

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    We study high mobility, interacting GaAs bilayer hole systems exhibiting counterflow superfluid transport at total filling factor ν=1\nu=1. As the density of the two layers is reduced, making the bilayer more interacting, the counterflow Hall resistivity (ρxy\rho_{xy}) decreases at a given temperature, while the counterflow longitudinal resistivity (ρxx\rho_{xx}), which is much larger than ρxy\rho_{xy}, hardly depends on density. On the other hand, a small imbalance in the layer densities can result in significant changes in ρxx\rho_{xx} at ν=1\nu=1, while ρxy\rho_{xy} remains vanishingly small. Our data suggest that the finite ρxx\rho_{xx} at ν=1\nu=1 is a result of mobile vortices in the superfluid created by the ubiquitous disorder in this system.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Mesoscopic supersolid of dipoles in a trap

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    A mesoscopic system of indirect dipolar bosons trapped by a harmonic potential is considered. The system has a number of physical realizations including dipole excitons, atoms with large dipolar moment, polar molecules, Rydberg atoms in inhomogenious electric field. We carry out a diffusion Monte Carlo simulation to define the quantum properties of a two-dimensional system of trapped dipoles at zero temperature. In dimensionless units the system is described by two control parameters, namely the number of particles and the strength of the interparticle interaction. We have shown that when the interparticle interaction is strong enough a mesoscopic crystal is formed. As the strength of interactions is decreased a multi-stage melting takes place. Off-diagonal order in the system is tested using natural orbitals analysis. We have found that the system might be Bose-condensed even in the case of strong interparticle interactions. There is a set of parameters for which a spatially ordered structure is formed while simultaneously the fraction of Bose condensed particles is non zero. This might be considered as a realization of a mesoscopic supersolid.Comment: 5 figure

    Chiral superfluid states in hybrid graphene heterostructures

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    The use of high quality hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) as a dielectric material has made possible the realization of graphene devices with very high mobility. In addition hBN can be made as thin as few atomic layers and, as recently demonstrated experimentally, can be used to isolate electrically two graphene layers only few nanometers apart. The combined use of graphene and hBN has therefore opened the possibility to create novel electronic structures. In this work we study the "hybrid" heterostructure formed by one sheet of single layer graphene (SLG) and one sheet of bilayer graphene (BLG) separated by a thin film of hBN. In general it is expected that interlayer interactions can drive the system to a spontaneously broken symmetry state characterized by interlayer phase coherence. The peculiarity of the SLG-BLG heterostructure is that the electrons in the layers (SLG and BLG) have different chiralities. We find that the difference of chirality between electrons in the two layers causes the spontaneously broken symmetry state to be N-fold degenerate. Moreover, we find that some of the degenerate states are chiral superfluid states, topologically distinct from the usual layer-ferromagnetism. The chiral nature of the ground state opens the possibility to realize protected midgap states. The N-fold degeneracy of the ground state makes the physics of SLG-BLG hybrid systems analogous to the physics of helium-3, in particular given the recent discovery of chiral superfluid states in this system.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Effects of density imbalance on the BCS-BEC crossover in semiconductor electron-hole bilayers

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    We study the occurrence of excitonic superfluidity in electron-hole bilayers at zero temperature. We not only identify the crossover in the phase diagram from the BCS limit of overlapping pairs to the BEC limit of non-overlapping tightly-bound pairs but also, by varying the electron and hole densities independently, we can analyze a number of phases that occur mainly in the crossover region. With different electron and hole effective masses, the phase diagram is asymmetric with respect to excess electron or hole densities. We propose as the criterion for the onset of superfluidity, the jump of the electron and hole chemical potentials when their densities cross.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Sensitive linear response of an electron-hole superfluid in a periodic potential

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    We consider excitons in a two-dimensional periodic potential and study the linear response of the excitonic superfluid to an electromagnetic wave at low and high densities. It turns out that the static structure factor for small wavevectors is very sensitive to a change of density and temperature. It is a consequence of the fact that thermal fluctuations play a crucial role at small wavevectors, since exchanging the order of the two limits, zero temperature and vanishing wavevector, leads to different results for the structure factor. This effect could be used for high accuracy measurements in the superfluid exciton phase, which might be realized by a gated electron-hole gas. The transition of the exciton system from the superfluid state to a non-superfluid state and its manifestation by light scattering are discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure

    Mobilities and Scattering Times in Decoupled Graphene Monolayers

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    Folded single layer graphene forms a system of two decoupled monolayers being only a few Angstroms apart. Using magnetotransport measurements we investigate the electronic properties of the two layers conducting in parallel. We show a method to obtain the mobilities for the individual layers despite them being jointly contacted. The mobilities in the upper layer are significantly larger than in the bottom one indicating weaker substrate influence. This is confirmed by larger transport and quantum scattering times in the top layer. Analyzing the temperature dependence of the Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations effective masses and corresponding Fermi velocities are obtained yielding reduced values down to 66 percent in comparison to monolayers.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure

    Theory of correlations in strongly interacting fluids of two-dimensional dipolar bosons

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    Ground-state properties of a two-dimensional fluid of bosons with repulsive dipole-dipole interactions are studied by means of the Euler-Lagrange hypernetted-chain approximation. We present a self-consistent semi-analytical theory of the pair distribution function g(r)g(r) and ground-state energy of this system. Our approach is based on the solution of a zero-energy scattering Schr\"{o}dinger equation for the "pair amplitude" g(r)\sqrt{g(r)} with an effective potential from Jastrow-Feenberg correlations. We find excellent agreement with quantum Monte Carlo results over a wide range of coupling strength, nearly up to the critical coupling for the liquid-to-crystal quantum phase transition. We also calculate the one-body density matrix and related quantities, such as the momentum distribution function and the condensate fraction.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, submitte
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