Thermal resistivity and hydrodynamics of the degenerate electron fluid in antimony
Detecting hydrodynamic fingerprints in the flow of electrons in solids constitutes a dynamic field of investigation in contemporary condensed matter physics. Most attention has been focused on the regime near the degeneracy temperature when the thermal velocity can present a spatially modulated prof...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2021-01, Vol.12 (1), p.195-195, Article 195 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Detecting hydrodynamic fingerprints in the flow of electrons in solids constitutes a dynamic field of investigation in contemporary condensed matter physics. Most attention has been focused on the regime near the degeneracy temperature when the thermal velocity can present a spatially modulated profile. Here, we report on the observation of a hydrodynamic feature in the flow of quasi-ballistic degenerate electrons in bulk antimony. By scrutinizing the temperature dependence of thermal and electric resistivities, we detect a size-dependent departure from the Wiedemann-Franz law, unexpected in the momentum-relaxing picture of transport. This observation finds a natural explanation in the hydrodynamic picture, where upon warming, momentum-conserving collisions reduce quadratically in temperature both viscosity and thermal diffusivity. This effect has been established theoretically and experimentally in normal-state liquid
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He. The comparison of electrons in antimony and fermions in
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He paves the way to a quantification of momentum-conserving fermion-fermion collision rate in different Fermi liquids.
Viscous fermionic flow appears in liquid helium but rarely appears in metallic solid. Here, Jaoui et al. report a T-square thermal resistivity due to momentum conserving electronic scattering in semi-metallic antimony, which is in agreement with the hydrodynamic scenario. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41467-020-20420-9 |