Theory of Coulomb Drag in Spatially Inhomogeneous Materials
Derek Y. H. Ho, Indra Yudhistira, Ben Yu-Kuang Hu, and Shaffique Adam

TL;DR
This paper extends effective medium theory to Coulomb drag in inhomogeneous two-dimensional materials, revealing how charge density fluctuations significantly influence drag behavior and aligning theoretical predictions with experimental observations.
Contribution
It introduces a generalized effective medium theory for Coulomb drag in inhomogeneous layers, providing a systematic way to incorporate charge density fluctuations into drag calculations.
Findings
Inhomogeneity strongly affects Coulomb drag transport.
Density fluctuations determine drag resistivity in exciton condensates.
Layer inhomogeneities explain temperature-dependent peaks in experimental data.
Abstract
Coulomb drag between parallel two-dimensional electronic layers is an excellent tool for the study of electron-electron interactions. In actual experiments, the layers display spatial charge density fluctuations due to imperfections such as external charged impurities. However, at present a systematic way of taking these inhomogeneities into account in drag calculations has been lacking, making the interpretation of experimental data problematic. On the other hand, there exists a highly successful and widely accepted formalism describing transport within single inhomogeneous layers known as effective medium theory. In this work, we generalize the standard effective medium theory to the case of Coulomb drag between two inhomogeneous sheets and demonstrate that inhomogeneity in the layers has a strong impact on drag transport. In the case of exciton condensation between the layers, we…
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