Phase transitions induced by a lateral superlattice potential in a two-dimensional electron gas
Alice Blanchette, Ren\'e C\^ot\'e

TL;DR
This paper investigates how lateral superlattice potentials induce phase transitions in a two-dimensional electron gas under magnetic fields, revealing new spin meron crystal phases influenced by lattice geometry and Landau level mixing.
Contribution
It extends previous work by analyzing the effects of Landau level mixing and deriving the phase diagram for a triangular superlattice, uncovering novel meron crystal phases.
Findings
Landau level mixing alters the phase diagram significantly.
A three-sublattice spin meron crystal emerges with a triangular lattice.
Identification of a new meron lattice phase with distinct spin textures.
Abstract
We study the phase transitions induced by a lateral superlattice potential (a metallic grid) placed on top of a two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG)formed in a semiconductor quantum well. In a quantizing magnetic field and at filling factor the ground state of the 2DEG depends on the strength of the superlattice potential as well as on the number of flux quanta piercing the unit cell of the external potential. It was recently shown[1] that in the case of a square lateral superlattice, the potential modulates both the electronic and spin density and in some range of , the ground state is a two-sublattice spin meron crystal where adjacent merons have the global phase of their spin texture shifted by , i.e. they are "antiferromagnetically" ordered. In this work, we evaluate the importance of Landau-level mixing on the phase diagram obtained previously for the…
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