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Page 1: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field

In classical physics, an electron orbits around the magnetic field at

a well-defined radius

r

=

p /e B

with angular frequency ω = eB/m .

In quantum physics the energy E

=

ħω

is quantized into discrete

levels

En

(Landau levels). And a classical orbit becomes a probability distri-

bution

(the absolute square of the electron wave function).

Classical picture

(Quantum picture on Slide 6)

Page 2: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

Landau Levels in Two Dimensions

The continuous 2D density of states contracts into discrete levels.

As the B-field increases, the level spacing increases, and each level sweeps up a larger part of the continuum.

ContinuumThe spacing between Landau levels is the same as for a harmonic oscillator, including the zero point energy:

En =

(n+½) ·

ħωc

The corresponding angular frequency is the cyclotron frequency ωc

, which contains the effective mass m*

:

ωc =

e B/m*

Page 3: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

m*m*me

The magnetic moment

is related to the angular momentum of a rotating electron. There are two types of angular momentum, spin (left) and

orbital (center , right).

Page 4: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

Introduce Magnetic Interactions into the Schrödinger Equation

The electric potential

generates the electric field E : E = /r

The magnetic potential A produces the magnetic field B :

B = /r ×A

A enters the Schrödinger equation in the same way as .

Make the substitutions

Energy E

(+i ħ

/t +

e )

Momentum p

( i ħ

/r + e A)

in the classical equation for the kinetic energy E: E = p2 /2m

That leads to the Schrödinger equation in a magnetic field:

(iħ

/t + e)

= 1/2m

(

i ħ

/r + eA)2

Time-independent potentials produce energy levels En

: i ħ

/t

= En

(In a solid one has m = m*

= effective mass, e= V0

=

inner potential.)

Page 5: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

Landau’s Solution of the Schrödinger Equation in a Magnetic Field

A constant field Bz

is described by the vector potential A = (0,

Bz

x , 0) .B = /r A

Bz

= /x Ay /y Ax

Bx

= By= 0In two dimensions x,y

the Schrödinger equation takes the form:

En

= 1/2m*

[-iħ/r + eA]2

= 1/2m*

[-ħ2 2/x2

+ (-iħ

/y +

eBz

x)2

]

The trial wave function (x,y) = exp(i ky) (x)converts the y-derivative into a multiplication with i k .

After dividing by

exp(i ky) one obtains a one-dimensional Schrödinger equation for (x)

:En

= 1/2m*

[-ħ2 2/x2

+ (ħk + eBz

x)2

]

This becomes the Schrödinger equation of a harmonic oscillator

, if one

rewrites 1/2m*

(ħk + eBz

x)2

as ½ f (x-x0

)2 with the “force constant”

f .Then one can use the familiar energy levels En of the harmonic oscillator to obtain the Landau levels and their wave functions n

(

Lect.11

, p.

4

).

The same B-field can be created by other vector potentials, such asA =

½ (-Bz

y , Bz

x , 0) . This ambiguity is called gauge symmetry. It plays a fundamental role in our understanding of particle physics.

Page 6: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

Wave Functions of Electrons in Landau Levels

The radial wave functions are those of a harmonic oscillator, except that the count starts at n=1 instead of n=0.

n

=

1 n =

2 n =

3

n

=

1

n

=

2

n

=

3

Classical probability

Page 7: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

Magnetic Flux Quantization

The magnetic flux is quantized

in units of h/e

.

Thus, a magnetic field really can be viewed as composed of individual field lines, as shown in the previous slide. Each line carries one flux quantum h/e. The B-field is the flux density (flux quanta per area).

Flux quantization can be observed directly in superconductors, where the flux quantum is h/2e

because of electron pairs with charge 2e

:

Regular array of flux quanta crossing the surface of a superconductor (white dots). This STM image is taken with a very small applied voltage, less than the energy gap of the superconductor. Superconducting regions are dark, because electrons cannot tunnel inside a gap. The magnetic field of a flux quantum destroys superconductivity and allows tunneling, creating bright spots for the flux quanta.

Page 8: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

Integer vs. Fractional Quantum Hall Effect

Integer

Quantum Hall Effect

:n electrons

circle around

one

flux quantum

(more electrons than flux quanta).

Fractional

Quantum Hall Effect n

=

1/m :One

electron circles around

m

flux quanta (more flux quanta than electrons).

Each flux quantum gets a fraction of the electron.

n

=

2

n

=

1/3

Page 9: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

The normal Hall

effect gives the line. xy

Ey

/jx

Bz

The quantum Hall

effect gives steps. xy

=

h/e2

·

1/n

for n =

1,2,3,…

Hall Effect vs. Quantum Hall Effect

n=1

n=2

Ohmic

resistivity

xy

[h/e2]xx

xy

Page 10: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

Video: Landau Level Filling vs. Quantum Hall Effect

Page 11: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

Each of the plateaus has a very precise value of the Hall resistivity, which is determined purely by the fundamental constants h and e. For n=1 one obtains the value xy

=

h/e2

= 25.

8128…

k

. It can be measured so precisely that the quantum Hall effect has become the resistance standard.

The Quantum Hall Resistance Standard

n=1

n=2

xy

[h/e2]xx

Page 12: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

Resistivity = =

Resistance = = =V Voltage E · lI Current j · A

Resistivity vs. Resistance in 2D and 3D

Since resistivity does not contain a length in 2D, the quantum Hall effect becomes independent of the shape of the sample.

in 2D: Resistivity =

Resistance = in 3D: Resistivity = m

Resistance = samein

2D

E

Electric Fieldj Current Density

A

length

l

Page 13: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

Vanishing Ohmic

Resistivity

The Ohmic

resistivity

xx

nearly vanishes at the plateaus. (It looks like a superconductor, but the resistance is not exactly zero.) That helps making accurate measurements.

Ohmic

resistivity

xy

[h/e2]xx

Page 14: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

Edge States Carry the Current

Page 15: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

The Fractional Quantum Hall Effect

When the electron density is reduced or the B-field increased beyond the n

=

1 plateau

, additional plateaus appear at fractional values of n

, such as n

=

2/3, 3/5

.

Page 16: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

Quantized Conductance

Attach nanotubes

to a STM tip and dip them into a liquid metal electrode.

Conductance Quantum: G0

=

2 e2/h

1 /13 k( factor 2 for spin ,

)

Each

wave

function =

band =

“channel”

contributes G0 to the conductance.

Page 17: Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Fielduw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/551/Lectures/Landau.pdf · Two-Dimensional Electron Gas (2DEG) in a Magnetic Field. In classical

Quantum conductance: G =

G0

•TG0

=

2 e2/h per channel, T

1=

transmission at the contacts

Energy to switch one bit: E =

kBT • ln2

Time to switch one bit: t =

h / E

Energy to transport a bit: E =

kBT • f/c • d

at the rate f over a distance d

Limits of Electronics from Information Theory

Birnbaum

and Williams, Physics Today, Jan. 2000, p. 38. Landauer, Feynman Lectures on Computation .