Observation of Fractional Quantum Hall Effect in an InAs Quantum Well

ORAL

Abstract

The InAs two-dimensional electron system is one of the prime candidates for hosting exotic quasiparticles such as Majorana fermions and parafermions that exhibit non-Abelian statistics. To fulfill its full promise, however, the system must be clean enough to show evidence of electron-electron interaction. Here we study a very low disorder, 24-nm-wide InAs quantum well with density of 7.8 × 1011 cm-2 and low-temperature mobility 1.8 × 106 cm2/Vs. The sample exhibits resolvable Shubnikov de Haas oscillations at magnetic field as low as ≈ 0.5 T (v = 68) and becomes spin-resolved at B > 0.9 T (v ≤ 37). At a temperature of ≈ 35 mK and B ≈ 24 T, we observe a deep minimum in longitudinal resistance, accompanied by a nearly quantized Hall plateau at filling factor v = 4/3. This observation places the InAs two-dimensional electron system among the few systems that exhibit fractional quantum Hall effect, and it is an important step towards the realization of exotic quasi-particles, such as parafermions, that are required for universal quantum computation.

Presenters

  • Meng Ma

    Princeton Univ, EE, Princeton University

Authors

  • Meng Ma

    Princeton Univ, EE, Princeton University

  • Md. Shafayat Hossain

    Princeton Univ, EE, Princeton University

  • Kevin Villegas Rosales

    Princeton Univ

  • Hao Deng

    Princeton Univ, Electrical Engineering, Princeton Univ

  • Thomas Tschirky

    ETH Zürich

  • Werner Wegscheider

    ETH - Zurich, Solid State Physics Laboratory, ETH Zurich, ETH Zurich, Physics, ETH Zurich, Department of Physics, ETH Zurich, Laboratory for Solid State Physics, ETH Zürich, Laboratorium fur Festkrperphysik, ETH-Zurich, Laboratorium fur Festkorperphysik, , ETH-Zurich, ETH Zürich, Laboratorium für Festkörperphysik, ETH Zürich, Laboratorium fur Festkorperphysik, ETH-Zurich

  • Mansour Shayegan

    Princeton Univ, Electrical Engineering, Princeton Univ, Department of Electrical Engineering, Princeton University, EE, Princeton University