Holes
1D Holes in GaAs
2004-06 Research Associate (Australian Research Council) in the QED group [22] at the School of Physics [23], University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia (School of Physics, UNSW).
Subject: Electronic transport properties of low-dimensional hole systems
My research project was based on the study of low dimensional systems with strong spin-orbits coupling such as holes in GaAs. I measured conductance quantization in 1D hole system associated with the conductance anomaly at 0.7 × 2e2/h. I studied the Zeeman effect on this 1D system, as well as the "0.7 structure" and the zero bias anomaly (see list of publications).
I have been awarded by an Australian Research Council Discovery Project Award Fellowship. This project based on the electrical control of spin in GaAs nanostructures involved close collaborations with Ulrich Zülicke theoretical physicist from Massey University, NZ, Mickael Pepper’s group from the Cavendish Laboratory at University of Cambridge and Yoshiro Hirayama’s group of NTT Basic Research Laboratory, Japan for high mobility two-dimensional hole wafers.
- Quantization and 0.7 structure in 1D holes
I have studied the ballistic transport properties of a ballistic one-dimensional channel created in a high
mobility bilayer 2D hole system formed in a back-gated GaAs-AlGaAs heterostructure. Clean and robust
conductance quantization [1] in units of 2e2/h at dilution fridge temperatures without the hysteresis and irregular oscillations that have hampered previous studies of 1D hole systems [2,3]. In addition to the expected plateaus at multiples of 2e2/h, a clear step at 0.7 × 2e2/h was observed.
Quantized steps were resolved in both the upper and lower quantum wires, with the strongest quantization
obtained in the upper wire. The high stability of these devices and the clear conductance quantization has
allowed to measure the energy spacing of the 1D subbands, which is significantly smaller than for
comparable electron systems [4], due to the large effective hole mass. I have also been involved in measurements
on induced hole quantum wires in which the quantized conductance and the 0.7 structure have been observed (see list of publications and measurements below).
[1] For review see C.W.J. Beenakker and H. van Houten, Solid State Physics, Volume 44, 1 (1991)
[2] A.J. Daveshnar et al., Phys. Rev. B. 55, R13409 (1997)
[3] L.P. Rokhinson et al., Superlattices Microstruct. 32, 99 (2002)
[4] I.M. Castleton et al., Physica B 249-251, 157 (1998)
- Zeeman effect in 1D holes
Properties of holes in GaAs are closely link to the peculiar and complicated valence band of this zinc-blende structure material. In addition, holes are subject to strong spin-orbit coupling [1]. In this work, I used similar hole quantum wires as described above. I observed and studied an extreme anisotropy of the Zeeman splitting with respect to the magnetic field orientation. Using source-drain biasing spectroscopy [2], one can quantitatively measure the spin splitting and quantified the effective Landé g-factor g*. On the contrary to 1D electron systems, in 1D holes g* is clearly anisotropic and larger than the 2D values [3,4]. This anisotropic behavior of the Zeeman splitting in 1D hole systems can be explained by the reorientation of the total angular
momentum J while the system goes from 2D to 1D. These results show that confining holes to a 1D system fundamentally alters their properties. This is a direct consequence of the spin-orbit coupling in this system.
[1] R. Winkler, Spin-Orbit Coupling Effects in Two-Dimensional Electron and Hole Systems (Springer, Berlin, 2003)
[2] L. I. Glazman and A.V. Khaetskii, Europhys. Lett. 9, 263 (1989)
[3] S. J. Papadakis, E. P. De Poortere, M. Shayegan, and R. Winkler, Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 5592 (2000).
[4] R. Winkler, S. J. Papadakis, E. P. De Poortere, and M. Shayegan, Phys. Rev. Lett. 85, 4574 (2000).
- 0.7 structure and Zero Bias Anomaly in 1D holes
In the non-interacting point of view, the conductance of a 1D system in the ballistic regime is quantized in units of 2e2/h [1]. However, a small feature under the first conductance plateau was first pointed out in the early ninety's [2] and studied in detail five years later [3]. In these first experiments, it was shown that this resonance-like feature, known as the 0.7 structure, was not due to a defect in the vicinity of the constriction and could be related to spin. Since then, this non-expected conductance anomaly has been extensively studied in 1D electron system but its origin is still very much debated [4]. Another conduction anomaly at low conductance, but this time in the non-linear regime (i.e. at non-zero bias voltage), was studied later and related to the 0.7 structure due to its position below the first plateau. From the detail study of this zero bias anomaly (ZBA), it was then argue that the 0.7 structure could be related to a Kondo-like correlated phenomenon [5]. Even though this explanation of the phenomenon was getting very popular, the Kondo effect as to the origin of the 0.7 structure has been recently experimentally ruled out [6].
In these experiments, I have studied the behavior of the 0.7 structure and the ZBA as a function of T and different magnetic field orientation. These results show a strong anisotropic behavior of both, 0.7 structure and ZBA with respect to the magnetic field orientation. This demonstrates that the 0.7 structure and the ZBA are linked and related to spin. This result is also in agreement with recent calculations which shown that heavy hole-light hole band-mixing happens when the width of the wire is reduced to half of the size of the quantum well (for a 20 nm quantum well) [7].
[1] C.W.J. Beenakker and H. van Houten, Solid State Physics, Volume 44, 1 (1991).
[2] N. K. Patel, J. T. Nicholls, L. Martin-Moreno, M. Pepper, J. E. F. Frost, D. A. Ritchie, and G. A. C. Jones , Phys. Rev. B 44, 13549 (1991).
[3] K. J. Thomas, J. T. Nicholls, M.Y. Simmons, M. Pepper, D. R. Mace, and D. A. Ritchie, Phys. Rev. Lett. 77, 135 (1996).
[4] G. Fitzgerald, Phys. Today 55, No. 5, 21 (2002).
[5] S. M. Cronenwett , H. J. Lynch, D. Goldhaber-Gordon, L. P. Kouwenhoven, C. M. Marcus, K. Hirose, N. S. Wingreen, and V. Urmansky, Phys. Rev. Lett. 88, 226805 (2002).
[6] F. Sfigakis, C. J. B. Ford, M. Pepper, M. Kataoka, D. A. Ritchie, and M.Y. Simmons, Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 026807 (2008).
[7] U. Zülicke, Phys. Stat. Sol. (c) 3, 4354 (2006).
Related publications:
- R. Danneau, O. Klochan, W.R. Clarke, L.H. Ho, A.P. Micolich, M.Y. Simmons, A.R. Hamilton, M. Pepper and D.A. Ritchie
0.7 structure and zero bias anomaly in one-dimensional hole systems
Physica E 40, 1501 (2008) [24]
- A. R. Hamilton, R. Danneau, O. Klochan, W.R. Clarke, A.P. Micolich, L.H. Ho, M.Y. Simmons, D.A. Ritchie, M. Pepper, K. Muraki and Y. Hirayama
The 0.7 anomaly in one-dimensional hole quantum wires
J. Phys. Condens. Matter. 20, 164205 (2008) [25]
- A. R. Hamilton, O. Klochan, R. Danneau, W.R. Clarke, L.H. Ho, A.P. Micolich, M.Y. Simmons, M. Pepper, D.A. Ritchie, K. Muraki and Y. Hirayama
Quantum transport in one-dimensional GaAs hole systems
Int. J. Nanotechnology 5, 318 (2008) [26]
- R. Danneau, O. Klochan, W.R. Clarke, L.H. Ho, A.P. Micolich, M.Y. Simmons, A.R. Hamilton, M. Pepper and D.A. Ritchie
0.7 structure and zero bias anomaly in ballistic hole quantum wires
Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 016403 (2008) [27]. Also on cond-mat/0702210 [28]
- R. Danneau, O. Klochan, W. R. Clarke, L. H. Ho, A. P. Micolich, M. Y. Simmons, A. R. Hamilton, M. Pepper, D. A. Ritchie and U. Zülicke
Anisotropic Zeeman splitting in ballistic one-dimensional hole systems
AIP Conference Proceedings 893, 699 (2007), also on cond-mat/0607357 [29]
- O. Klochan, W. R. Clarke, R. Danneau, A. P. Micolich, L. H. Ho, A. R. Hamilton, K. Muraki and Y. Hirayama
Conductance quantization in induced one-dimensional hole systems
AIP Conference Proceedings 893, 681 (2007) AIP Conference Proceedings 893, 681 (2007) [30]
- O. Klochan, W. R. Clarke, R. Danneau, A. P. Micolich, L.H. Ho, A. R. Hamilton, K. Muraki and Y. Hirayama
Ballistic transport in induced one-dimensional hole systems
Appl. Phys. Lett. 89, 092105 (2006) [31], also on cond-mat/0607509 [32]
- R. Danneau, O. Klochan, W. R. Clarke, L.H. Ho, A. P. Micolich, M. Y. Simmons, A. R. Hamilton, M. Pepper, D. A. Ritchie and U. Zülicke
Zeeman splitting in ballistic hole quantum wires
Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 026403 (2006) [33], also on cond-mat/0607355 [34]
- R. Danneau, W. R. Clarke, O. Klochan, L.H. Ho, A. P. Micolich, A. R. Hamilton, M. Y. Simmons, M. Pepper and D. A. Ritchie
Ballistic transport in one-dimensional bilayer hole systems
Physica E 34, 550 (2006) [35]
- R. Danneau, W. R. Clarke, O. Klochan, A. P. Micolich, A. R. Hamilton, M. Y. Simmons, M. Pepper and D. A. Ritchie
Conductance quantization and the 0.7 × 2e2/h conductance anomaly in one-dimensional hole systems
Appl. Phys. Lett. 88, 012107 (2006) [36], also on cond-mat/0507592 [37]
Other results on 2D holes:
- L.H. Ho, W.R. Clarke, A.P. Micolich, R. Danneau, O. Klochan, A.R. Hamilton, M.Y. Simmons, M. Pepper and D.A. Ritchie
The Effect of screening long range Coulomb interactions on the metallic behavior in two-dimensional hole systems
Phys. Rev. B 77, 201402(R) (2008) [38], also on arXiv:0804.4049 [39]
- L.H. Ho, W.R. Clarke, R. Danneau, O. Klochan, A.P. Micolich, A.R. Hamilton, M.Y. Simmons, M. Pepper and D.A. Ritchie
Screening long range Coulomb interactions in two-dimensional hole systems using a bilayer heterostructure
Physica E 40, 1700 (2008) [40]