Comparing the Extrinsic Orbital Hall Effect in Centrosymmetric and Noncentrosymmetric Systems: Insights from Bilayer Transition Metal Dichalcogenides
Azadeh Faridi, and Reza Asgari

TL;DR
This study compares the extrinsic orbital Hall effect in bilayer transition metal dichalcogenides with and without inversion symmetry, revealing that breaking symmetry enhances the effect, especially at higher Fermi energies, with implications for experiments.
Contribution
It demonstrates how inversion symmetry breaking significantly amplifies the extrinsic orbital Hall effect in bilayer TMDs, highlighting the role of symmetry in transport phenomena.
Findings
Extrinsic OHE dominates away from band edges at higher Fermi energies.
Breaking inversion symmetry greatly enhances the extrinsic OHE.
In centrosymmetric systems, only off-diagonal density matrix components contribute.
Abstract
Both intrinsic and extrinsic orbital Hall effects (OHE) in bilayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are investigated in the presence of short-range disorder using quantum kinetic theory. Bilayer TMDs provide an ideal platform to study the effects of inversion symmetry breaking on transport properties due to their unique structural and electronic characteristics. While bilayer TMDs are naturally inversion symmetric, applying a finite gate voltage to create a bias between the layers effectively breaks this symmetry. Our findings reveal that slightly away from the band edges, the extrinsic OHE becomes the dominant contribution in both inversion-symmetric and asymmetric cases, with its prominence increasing significantly as the Fermi energy rises. Furthermore, we demonstrate that breaking inversion symmetry greatly enhances the extrinsic OHE. This enhancement arises from the…
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Taxonomy
Topics2D Materials and Applications · Organic and Molecular Conductors Research · Heusler alloys: electronic and magnetic properties
