학술논문

Composite-fermion pairing at half and quarter filled lowest Landau level
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Phys. Rev. B 109, 035306 (2024)
Subject
Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons
Language
Abstract
The Halperin-Lee-Read Fermi sea of composite fermions (CFs) at half-filled lowest Landau level is the realization of a fascinating non-Fermi liquid metallic phase. Remarkably, experiments have found that as the width of the quantum well is increased, this state makes a transition into a fractional quantum Hall (FQH) state, the origin of which has remained an important puzzle since its discovery more than three decades ago. We perform detailed and accurate quantitative calculations using a systematic variational framework for the pairing of CFs that closely mimics the BCS theory of superconductivity. We find: (i) as the quantum-well width is increased, the single-component CF Fermi sea occupying the lowest symmetric subband of the quantum well undergoes an instability into a single-component p-wave paired state of CFs; (ii) the theoretical phase diagram in the quantum-well width - electron density plane is in excellent agreement with experiments; (iii) a sufficient amount of asymmetry in the charge distribution of the quantum well destroys the FQH effect, as observed experimentally; and (iv) the two-component 331 state is energetically less favorable than the single component paired state. Evidence for FQH effect has been seen in wide quantum wells also at quarter-filled lowest Landau level; here our calculations indicate an f-wave paired state of CFs. We further investigate bosons in the lowest Landau level at filling factor equal to one and show that a p-wave pairing instability of CFs, which are bosons carrying a single flux quantum, in agreement with exact diagonalization studies. The general consistency of the composite-fermion BCS approach with experiments lends support to the notion of CF pairing as the mechanism of FQH effects at even-denominator filling factors. Various experimental implications are mentioned.
Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures