Electronic transport and the localization length in the quantum Hall effect
M. Furlan

TL;DR
This study investigates electron transport mechanisms and localization length in the quantum Hall effect using high mobility GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures, revealing how transport regimes influence universality and localization near Landau levels.
Contribution
It provides experimental analysis of transport processes and localization length in the quantum Hall regime, comparing two methods and exploring the divergence of localization length and dielectric function.
Findings
Linear relation between $ ho_{xy}$ and $ ho_{xx}$ with asymmetries near plateau centers
Divergence of localization length $\xi$ as filling factor approaches Landau level center
Discrepancies in $\xi$ measurements attributed to electric field inhomogeneity
Abstract
We report on recent experimental results from transport measurements with large Hall bars made of high mobility GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures. Thermally activated conductivities and hopping transport were investigated in the integer quantum Hall regime. The predominant transport processes in two dimensions are discussed. The implications of transport regime on prefactor universality and on the relation between and are studied. Particularly in the Landau level tails, strictly linear dependence was found, with pronounced asymmetries with respect to the plateau centre. At low temperatures, Ohmic (temperature dependent) as well as non-Ohmic (current dependent) transport were investigated and analysed on the basis of variable-range hopping theory. The non-Ohmic regime could successfully be described by an effective electron temperature…
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