Orbital Landau level dependence of the fractional quantum Hall effect in quasi-two dimensional electron layers: finite-thickness effects
Michael R. Peterson, Th. Jolicoeur, and S. Das Sarma

TL;DR
This study investigates how the finite thickness of quasi-2D electron layers influences the stability of various fractional quantum Hall states across different Landau levels, highlighting conditions that favor the 5/2 state relevant for topological quantum computing.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the orbital Landau level dependence and finite-thickness effects on FQHE states, especially the enigmatic 5/2 state, using overlap calculations and geometry considerations.
Findings
FQHE is absent in the third Landau level for any thickness.
FQHE is most robust at zero thickness in the lowest Landau level for 1/3 and 1/5.
Finite thickness enhances the stability of the 5/2 state in the second Landau level.
Abstract
The fractional quantum Hall effect (FQHE) in the second orbital Landau level at filling factor 5/2 remains enigmatic and motivates our work. We consider the effect of the quasi-2D nature of the experimental FQH system on a number of FQH states (fillings 1/3, 1/5, 1/2) in the lowest, second, and third Landau levels (LLL, SLL, TLL,) by calculating the overlap, as a function of quasi-2D layer thickness, between the exact ground state of a model Hamiltonian and the consensus variational wavefunctions (Laughlin wavefunction for 1/3 and 1/5 and the Moore-Read Pfaffian wavefunction for 1/2). Using large overlap as a stability, or FQHE robustness, criterion we find the FQHE does not occur in the TLL (for any thickness), is the most robust for zero thickness in the LLL for 1/3 and 1/5 and for 11/5 in the SLL, and is most robust at finite-thickness (4-5 magnetic lengths) in the SLL for the…
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