CT- Minimally viscous electron fluid in ultraclean graphene
APA
(2024). CT- Minimally viscous electron fluid in ultraclean graphene. SciVideos. https://youtube.com/live/wyeypJJAWDw
MLA
CT- Minimally viscous electron fluid in ultraclean graphene. SciVideos, Jul. 15, 2024, https://youtube.com/live/wyeypJJAWDw
BibTex
@misc{ scivideos_ICTS:29120, doi = {}, url = {https://youtube.com/live/wyeypJJAWDw}, author = {}, keywords = {}, language = {en}, title = {CT- Minimally viscous electron fluid in ultraclean graphene}, publisher = {}, year = {2024}, month = {jul}, note = {ICTS:29120 see, \url{https://scivideos.org/icts-tifr/29120}} }
Abstract
Hydrodynamic flow of electrons in graphene has garnered significant attention over the past decade, emerging as a solid-state platform which can be used to probe the physics associated with relativistic plasma, black holes, and quantum gravity [1,2]. Particularly near the charge neutrality point, graphene is expected to behave like a “Dirac fluid†[3], with its shear viscosity per unit entropy density (η/s) reaching a universal holographic lower bound, ħ/4πk_B where ħ is the reduced Planck’s constant and kB is the Boltzmann’s constant. However, direct experimental evidence of this is still lacking. In this work [4], we have fabricated hBN-encapsulated ultraclean graphene devices with exceptionally high electron mobilities (~ 10^6 cm^2 V^-1 s^-1) and performed electrical and thermal transport from room temperature down to 20 K. We observed a giant violation of the Wiedemann-Franz Law near the charge neutrality point across a range of temperatures T >> T_F. We also computed t...