Brian Skinner, MIT, Boston

Jeudi 12 Avril 2018 à 14h00 Amphi Urbain, Bâtiment N RdC

Semimetals Unlimited : Unbounded electrical and thermal transport properties in nodal semimetals

Abstract :
Modern electronics is built on semiconductors, whose utility comes from their ability to operate on either side of the conductor-insulator dichotomy. For practical applications, however, semiconductors face certain unavoidable limitations imposed by the physics of Anderson localization and by the disorder introduced through doping. In this talk I discuss whether these same limitations apply to nodal semimetals, which are a novel class of three-dimensional materials that have a vanishing density of states (like insulators) but no gap to electron-hole excitations (like conductors). I show that, surprisingly, in a certain class of nodal semimetals the electronic mobility can far exceed the bounds that constrain doped semiconductors, becoming divergingly large even with a finite concentration of charged impurities. I then discuss the thermoelectric effect in semimetals, and show that their electron-hole symmetry allows for a thermopower that grows without bound under the application of a strong magnetic field. This large thermopower apparently enables the development of devices with record-large thermoelectric figure of merit.


Haut de page



À lire aussi...

Assaf Hamo, Department of Physics, Harvard University, United States

February 18, 2021 02:00 PM Paris (GMT +1) Imaging Hydrodynamic Flow in WTe2 with Cryogenic Quantum Magnetometry Hydrodynamic electron flow is a (...) 

> Lire la suite...

Michele Fabrizio, SISSA Trieste

Thursday June, 10 2021 Landau Fermi liquids in disguise Order by order in perturbation theory one can prove, e.g., in 3D, that the physical (...) 

> Lire la suite...