Presented By: Applied Physics
Applied Physics Seminar | Metal or insulator? That is the question
Lu Li, Ph.D., Associate Chair, Department of Physics and Professor of Physics, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, University of Michigan
Abstract:
Lu will talk about the dual nature of the topological Kondo insulators. They are perfect insulators like pure silicon, and their electrical resistivity diverges by more than a million times during cooling down. Yet, they show a characteristic feature of good metal---oscillations in magnetization under magnetic fields.
In this talk, Lu will review his discovery of this contradiction: his quest to observe insulators’ oscillations, not only in magnetization but also in electrical resistivity. His experiments demonstrate that the oscillatory carriers are just like electrons, following the Fermi-Dirac distributions, even in this perfect insulator. So, can the compound be both metal and insulator? Or can a fermion exist in solids even without electrical charge? Let's find the answer.
References:
[1] Xiang, Z. et al., Science 362, 65 (2018).
[2] Li, Lu et al., Nature Review Physics 2, 463 (2020).
[3] Xiang, Z., et al., Nature Physics 17, 788 (2021).
[4] Zheng, G. et al., arXiv:2310.07989 (2023)
[5] Li, G. et al., Science 346, 1208 (2014).
[6] Xiang, Z., et al., Physical Review X 7, 031054 (2017).
Lu will talk about the dual nature of the topological Kondo insulators. They are perfect insulators like pure silicon, and their electrical resistivity diverges by more than a million times during cooling down. Yet, they show a characteristic feature of good metal---oscillations in magnetization under magnetic fields.
In this talk, Lu will review his discovery of this contradiction: his quest to observe insulators’ oscillations, not only in magnetization but also in electrical resistivity. His experiments demonstrate that the oscillatory carriers are just like electrons, following the Fermi-Dirac distributions, even in this perfect insulator. So, can the compound be both metal and insulator? Or can a fermion exist in solids even without electrical charge? Let's find the answer.
References:
[1] Xiang, Z. et al., Science 362, 65 (2018).
[2] Li, Lu et al., Nature Review Physics 2, 463 (2020).
[3] Xiang, Z., et al., Nature Physics 17, 788 (2021).
[4] Zheng, G. et al., arXiv:2310.07989 (2023)
[5] Li, G. et al., Science 346, 1208 (2014).
[6] Xiang, Z., et al., Physical Review X 7, 031054 (2017).
Co-Sponsored By
Livestream Information
ZoomNovember 13, 2024 (Wednesday) 12:00pm
Meeting ID: 93170512369
Meeting Password: Passcode: 898441
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