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Glassy dynamics near the two-dimensional metal-insulator transition Acknowledgments: NSF grants DMR-0071668, DMR-0403491; IBM, NHMFL; V. Dobrosavljević, I. Raičević J. Jaroszyński and Dragana Popović National High Magnetic Field Laboratory Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL
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metal-insulator transition (MIT) in 2D electron and hole systems in semiconductor heterostructures (Si, GaAs/AlGaAs, …) Background Si Si MOSFET critical resistivity ~h/e 2 role of disorder? r s U/E F n s -1/2 10 role of Coulomb interactions?
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competition between disorder and Coulomb interactions: glassy ordering??? [Davies, Lee, Rice, PRL 49, 758 (1982); 2D: Chakravarty et al., Philos. Mag. B 79, 859 (1999); Thakur et al., PRB 54, 7674 (1996) and 59, R5280 (1999); Pastor, Dobrosavljević, PRL 83, 4642 (1999)] Our earlier work: transport and resistance noise measurements to probe the electron dynamics in a 2D system in Si MOSFETs signatures of glassy dynamics in noise 2D MIT in Si: melting of the Coulomb glass
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T=0 phase diagram n s * – separatrix (from transport) n g – onset of slow dynamics (from noise) n c – critical density for the MIT from (T) on both insulating and metallic sides -Insulator: (T=0)=0 -Slow, correlated dynamics (1/f noise; 1.8) -Metal: (T=0) 0; d /dT<0 -Fast, uncorrelated dynamics (1/f noise; =1) High disorder (low-mobility devices): n c < n g < n s * Low disorder (high-mobility devices): n c n s * ≲ n g for B=0, n c < n s * ≲ n g for B≠0 (Coulomb glass) -Metal: (T=0) 0; -Slow, correlated dynamics (1/f noise; 1.8) (n s,T)= (n s,T=0)+b(n s )T 3/2 Theory: Dobrosavljević et al. n c n g n s * density [Bogdanovich, Popović, PRL 88, 236401 (2002); Jaroszyński, Popović, Klapwijk, PRL 89, 276401 (2002); Jaroszyński, Popović, Klapwijk, PRL 92, 226403 (2004)]
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slow relaxations and history dependence of (n s,T) also observed for n s < n g Samples: low-mobility (high disorder) Si MOSFETs with LxW of 2x50 and 1x90 m 2 [from the same wafer as those used for noise measurements in Bogdanovich et al., PRL 88, 236401 (2002); all samples very similar] data presented for 2x50 m 2 sample Note: critical density n c (10 11 cm -2 ) 4.5 obtained from (n s,T=0) in (n s,T)= (n s,T=0) + b(n s )T 3/2, which holds slightly above n c (up to n 0.2); below n c, is insulating (decreases exponentially with decreasing T) - similar to published data noise measurements in this sample give n g (10 11 cm -2 ) 7.5, the same as published results This work: a systematic study of relaxations as a function of n s and T
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Sample annealed @ Vg=11V (n s =20.26 x 10 11 cm -2 ) @ T=10K; then cooled down to different T (here to 3.5 K); then @ t = 0, Vg switched (here) to Vg=7.4 V (n s =4.74 x 10 11 cm -2 ) and relaxation measured. After change of Vg, decreases fast, goes through a minimum and then relaxes up towards 0, which is when sample is cooled down at Vg=7.4 V (i.e. equilibrium ). To measure 0, after some time (here approx. 55000 s), T is increased up to 10 K to rejuvenate the sample and then lowered back to 3.5 K. Example 1: Note: large perturbation
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Sample annealed @ Vg=11V @ T=10K; then cooled down to different T (here to 1 K); then @ t = 0, Vg switched (here) to Vg=7.4 V and relaxation measured. After change of Vg, initially decreases fast to below 0, and then continues to decrease slowly. In both cases, the system first moves away from equilibrium. Example 2:
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Relaxations at different temperatures for a fixed final V g =7.4 V
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I “Short” t (i.e. just before the minimum in ): data collapse as shown after a horizontal shift low (T) and a vertical shift a(T). This means scaling: / 0 =a(T)g(t/ low (T)) V g =7.4 V Scaling function: linear on a ln [ /( 0 a(T))] vs. (t/ low ) ( =0.3 for V g =7.4V) scale for over 4 orders of magnitude in t/ low, i.e. a stretched exponential dependence for intermediate times (just below minimum in (T)). 4.4 K 3.2 K 1.2 K 2.4 K 3.7 K [ a(T))] a(T) ( low ) -
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At even shorter times (best observable at lowest T): power-law dependence / 0 t - In this region, scaling may be achieved by a nonunique combination of horizontal and vertical shifts. (dashed lines are linear least squares fits with slopes 0.068 at 0.4 K and 0.071 at 0.3 K )
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At lowest T (< 1.2 K), stretched exponential crosses over to a power law dependence with an exponent 0.07 but scaling in the power law region is not unambiguous. Scaling: / low (T) [ a(T)] V g =7.4 V
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Can we describe all the data with the following (Ogielski) scaling function? / 0 t - exp[-(t/ low ) ] = ( low ) - (t/ low ) - exp[-(t/ low ) ] f(t/ low ) (It works in spin glasses: C. Pappas et al., PRB 68, 054431 (2003) in Au 0.86 Fe 0.14 ) V g =7.4 V 0.24 K 0.5 1.0 2.4 3.2 4.4 Yes! black dashed line – fit to Ogielski form
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curves collapse well down to 0.8 – 1.2 K; extract exponents and experiment and analysis repeated for different V g, i.e. n s : relaxations measured after a rapid change of Vg from 11 V to a given V g at many different T V g =7.4 V 1.2 K 2.4 4.4 3.2 black dashed line – fit to Ogielski form A blowup of the region where curves collapse well:
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individual fits Ogielski formula individual fits Ogielski formula n s (10 11 cm -2 ) exponent - power law exponent; - stretched exponential exponent dashed lines are guides to the eye n c (10 11 cm -2 ) 4.5 →0 at n s (10 11 cm -2 ) 7.5-8.0 n g, where n g was obtained from noise measurements!!! grows with n s – relaxations faster
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log[ low (2.4 K) / low (T)] vs. 1/T black line is an Arrhenius fit to the data in the regime where curves collapse well; Arrhenius fit works well over 7 orders of magnitude in 1/ low Scaling parameters vs. T
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1/ low (T) = k 0 exp(-E a /T), with E a 19 K and k 0 6.25 s -1 for V g =7.4 V similar results are obtained for other V g in the glassy region (e.g. E a 20.8 K for V g =7.2 V, and E a 22 K for V g =8.0 V) E a 20 K, independent of V g in this range (3.99 ≤ n s (10 11 cm -2 ) ≤ 7.43; 29 ≤ E F (K) ≤ 54) but k 0 =k 0 (V g ), i.e. k 0 =k 0 (n s )
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1/ low (n s,T) = k 0 (n s ) exp(-E a /T) T=3 K a decrease of low with decreasing n s does not imply that the system is faster at low n s ; since the dominant effect is the decrease of , the system is actually slower at low n s low (s) n s (10 11 cm -2 ) individual fits Ogielski formula dashed lines guide the eye
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low (T) exp(an s 1/2 ) exp(E a /T), Coulomb energy U n s 1/2 ; 1/r s =E F /U ~ n s 1/2 ln low (s) n s (10 11 cm -2 ) ln low (s) [n s (10 11 cm -2 )] 1/2 Blue line – fit to n s 1/2 strong evidence for the dominant role of Coulomb interactions between 2D electrons in the observed slow dynamics
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II Long t (i.e. above minimum in (t), observable at highest T): all collapse onto one curve after horizontal shift (no vertical shift needed, as expected: all relax to 0 i.e. to 0 on this scale). Data collapsed onto T=5 K curve. This means scaling: / 0 = f(t/ high (T)) V g =7.4 V
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Scaling function – describes relaxation of to 0 from below. There are two simple exponential regions (the slower one is not always seen). V g =7.4 V ( 0 - )/ 0 exp(-k 1 t/ high ) ( 0 - )/ 0 exp(-k 2 t/ high )
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Scaling parameter high vs. T high exp[E A /(T-T 0 )], T 0 0, E A 57 K (Arrhenius) V g =7.4 V
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Characteristic times high /k 1 and high /k 2 do not depend on V g in the range shown; they also do not depend on the direction of V g change (see below). The data shown were obtained by changing V g between the values given on the plot. The fits on this plot were made to all points. Final V g s (7.2 to 11) correspond to a density range from 3.99 to 20.36 in units of 10 11 cm -2 (E F from 29 K to 149 K). high exp[E A /(T-T 0 )], T 0 =0, E A 57 K
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Examples of time scales: T=5 K, high /k 1 34 s; T= 1 K, high /k 1 10 13 years! (age of the Universe 10 10 years) the system appears glassy for short enough t < ( high /k 1 ) : relaxations have the Ogielski form t - exp[-(t/ low ) ], with low exp (an s 1/2 ) exp (E a /T), E a 20 K the system reaches equilibrium at ( high /k 1 )<( high /k 2 ) << t: relaxations exponential ( high exp (E A /T), E A 57 K) Conclusions Note: The system reaches equilibrium only after it first goes farther away from equilibrium! [Also observed in orientational glasses and spin glasses; see also “roundabout” relaxation: Morita and Kaneko, PRL 94, 087203 (2005)] high → as T→0, i.e. T g = 0 [see Grempel, Europhys. Lett. 66, 854 (2004)] consistent with noise measurements
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