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Negative longitudinal magnetoresistance in gallium arsenide quantum wells

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Negative longitudinal magnetoresistances (NLMRs) have been recently observed in a variety of topological materials and often considered to be associated with Weyl fermions that have a defined chirality. Here we… Click to show full abstract

Negative longitudinal magnetoresistances (NLMRs) have been recently observed in a variety of topological materials and often considered to be associated with Weyl fermions that have a defined chirality. Here we report NLMRs in non-Weyl GaAs quantum wells. In the absence of a magnetic field the quantum wells show a transition from semiconducting-like to metallic behaviour with decreasing temperature. We observe pronounced NLMRs up to 9 Tesla at temperatures above the transition and weak NLMRs in low magnetic fields at temperatures close to the transition and below 5 K. The observed NLMRs show various types of magnetic field behaviour resembling those reported in topological materials. We attribute them to microscopic disorder and use a phenomenological three-resistor model to account for their various features. Our results showcase a contribution of microscopic disorder in the occurrence of unusual phenomena. They may stimulate further work on tuning electronic properties via disorder/defect nano-engineering.The attribution of negative longitudinal magnetoresistance (NLMR) in Weyl metals to a chiral anomaly is already challenged. Here, NLMR resembling that of Weyl metals is demonstrated in a non-Weyl-metal GaAs quantum well originating from different types of disorder.

Keywords: quantum; disorder; longitudinal magnetoresistance; negative longitudinal; quantum wells

Journal Title: Nature Communications
Year Published: 2019

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