Title: Integer Quantum Hall Effect
1Integer Quantum Hall Effect
- By
- Priyanka Milinda Rupasinghe
2Discovery of Hall Effect
- When an electric current passes through a metal
strip with a perpendicular magnetic field, the
electrons are deflected towards one edge and a
potential difference is created across the strip.
This phenomenon is termed the Hall Effect.
It was discovered in 1879 by an American
physicist E.H. Hall. And this effect has now been
thoroughly studied and well understood in common
metals and semiconductors.
- In Hall Effect experiments, It is observed that
the Hall resistance (RH ) increases linearly with
the applied magnetic field B.
- Entirely new phenomena appear when the Hall
effect is studied in two-dimensional electron
systems.
3Discovery of Quantum Hall Effect
- In the Spring of 1980 von Klitzing showed
experimentally that the Hall conductivity has
discrete values in two-Dimensional systems. - As a result, in 1985, Klaus von Klitzing was
awarded Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery
of quantum Hall effect.
Klaus von Klitzing
4The Landau Levels
- In a strong magnetic field the energy of the
electron is quantized. - These discrete energy values are given by
n 0,1,2,
Where is the Cyclotron frequency
5Longitudinal and Hall conductivities
- In the presence of a steady magnetic field, the
conductivity and resistivity become tensors.
Here, and are called the
Longitudinal and Hall
conductivities
6Measurement of the Hall and Longitudinal
Resistivities
7The Filling Factor
Where e is the electronic charge and h is the
plank constant.
This indicates that for any fixed value of the
magnetic field , is the
appropriate unit for the electron concentration
(n). Here ? is called the filling factor.
8Experimental Results
According to an experiment done by V. Klitzing,
the Hall resistivity of silicon MOSFETs as a
function of the gate voltage (which is
proportional to the electron concentration) is a
constant within a certain range around each
integer value of the filling factor.
Simultaneously, in these regions, the
longitudinal conductivity was found to be
vanishing and the Hall conductivity remains a
constant.
9A schematic view of the quantum Hall effect in
terms of the conductivities as functions of the
filling factor
10Observed QHE in medium mobility ( 5200 cm2/Vs )
GaAs heterostructures at 60mK
11Explanation of IQHE
- When the Fermi energy is in a gap, i.e. between
the fields (a) and (b) in the diagram, Hall
resistance cannot change from the quantized value
for the whole time, and so a plateau results. - If the Fermi energy in the Landau level, i.e.
the field (c) is reached in the diagram, it is
possible to change the voltage and a finite value
of resistance will be appeared. In this situation
the step like behavior of the Hall conductivity
is observed.
12In the presence of impurity, the density of
states will evolve from sharp Landau levels to a
broader spectrum of levels.
- There are two kinds of energy levels, namely
localized and extended states - As the density is increased (or the magnetic
field is decreased), the localized states are
gradually fill up without any change in
occupation of the extended states, thus without
any change in the Hall resistance. For these
densities the Hall resistance is on a step in the
Figure(right) while longitudinal resistance
vanishes (at zero temperature).
- When the Fermi level passes through the
extended state (Or the Fermi level is in the core
of the extended state) the longitudinal
resistance becomes appreciable and the hall
resistance makes its transition from one plateau
to the next as in figure(right)
13Schematic Picture of the Quantum Hall Effect
14Benefits of IQHE
- The integer quantum Hall effect is now used as
the international standard of resistance. - The incredibly accurate quantization of the Hall
resistance to approximatelyone part in 108 makes
this possible. - Finding the structure constant
- The constant e2/h is proportional to the fine
structure constant in electrodynamics, so the
quantum Hall effect provides us an independent
way of accurately measuring this constant.
15REFRENCES
- D. Yoshioka, The Quantum Hall Effect.
- M.JanBen, O. Viehweger,U. Fastenrath and J. Hajdu
Introduction to the Theory of the Integer Quantum
Hall Effect. - T. Chakraborty and P.Pietilainen The Quantum Hall
Effects (Fractional and Integral) - www.pha.jhu.edu/qiuym/qhe/node2.html
- nobelprize.org/physics/laureates/1985/press.html
- www.warwick.ac.uk/phsbm/qhe.htm
- www.pha.jhu.edu/qiuym/qhe/node4.html
16THANK YOU