arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:cond-mat/0608372AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Band structure of a two-dimensional (2D) electron gas in the presence of 2D electric and magnetic modulations and of a perpendicular magnetic field

X. F. Wang, P. Vasilopoulos, F. M. Peeters

Published 2006-08-16Version 1

Two-dimensional (2D) periodic electric modulations of a 2D electron gas split each Landau level into the well-known butterfly-type spectrum described by a Harper-type equation multiplied by an envelope function. This equation is slightly modified for 2D magnetic modulations but the spectrum remains qualitatively the same. The same holds if both types of modulations are present. The modulation strengths do not affect the structure of the butterfly-type spectrum, they only change its scale or its envelope. The latter is described by the ratio $\alpha$ of the flux quantum $h/e$ to the flux per unit cell. Exact numerical and approximate analytical results are presented for the energy spectrum as a function of the magnetic field. For integer $\alpha$ the internal structure collapses into a band for all cases. The bandwidth at the Fermi energy depends on the modulation strength, the electron density, and, when both modulations are present, on the phase difference between them. In the latter case if the modulations have a $\pi/2$ phase difference, the bandwidth at the Fermi energy is nearly independent of the magnetic field and the commensurability oscillations of the diffusive contribution to the resistivity disappear.

Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:0907.1631 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (Published 2009-07-09, updated 2010-12-31)
Electron transport and Goos-Hanchen shift in graphene with electric and magnetic barriers: optical analogy and band structure
arXiv:1006.0127 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (Published 2010-06-01)
Band structure and gaps of triangular graphene superlattices
arXiv:1601.00619 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (Published 2016-01-04)
Band structure of topological insulators from noise measurements in tunnel junctions