Dissipation-enabled hydrodynamic conductivity in a tunable bandgap semiconductor

  • Cheng Tan
  • , Derek Y.H. Ho
  • , Lei Wang
  • , Jia I.A. Li
  • , Indra Yudhistira
  • , Daniel A. Rhodes
  • , Takashi Taniguchi
  • , Kenji Watanabe
  • , Kenneth Shepard
  • , Paul L. McEuen
  • , Cory R. Dean
  • , Shaffique Adam
  • , James Hone

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

28 Scopus citations

Abstract

Electronic transport in the regime where carrier-carrier collisions are the dominant scattering mechanism has taken on new relevance with the advent of ultraclean two-dimensional materials. Here, we present a combined theoretical and experimental study of ambipolar hydrodynamic transport in bilayer graphene demonstrating that the conductivity is given by the sum of two Drude-like terms that describe relative motion between electrons and holes, and the collective motion of the electron-hole plasma. As predicted, the measured conductivity of gapless, charge-neutral bilayer graphene is sample- and temperature-independent over a wide range. Away from neutrality, the electron-hole conductivity collapses to a single curve, and a set of just four fitting parameters provides quantitative agreement between theory and experiment at all densities, temperatures, and gaps measured. This work validates recent theories for dissipation-enabled hydrodynamic conductivity and creates a link between semiconductor physics and the emerging field of viscous electronics.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbereabi8481
JournalScience Advances
Volume8
Issue number15
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2022

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