Absence of Signatures of Weyl Orbits in the Thickness Dependence of Quantum Transport in Cadmium Arsenide

Abstract

In a Weyl orbit, the Fermi arc surface states on opposite surfaces of the topological semimetal are connected through the bulk Weyl or Dirac nodes. Having a real-space component, these orbits accumulate a sample-size-dependent phase. Following recent work on the three dimensional Dirac semimetal cadmium arsenide (Cd3As2), we have sought evidence for this thickness-dependent effect in quantum oscillations and quantum Hall plateaus in (112)-oriented Cd3As2 thin films grown by molecular beam epitaxy. We compare quantum transport in films of varying thickness at apparently identical gate-tuned carrier concentrations and find no clear dependence of the relative phase of the quantum oscillations on the sample thickness. We show that small variations in carrier densities, difficult to detect in low-field Hall measurements, lead to shifts in quantum oscillations that are commensurate with previously reported phase shifts. Future claims of Weyl orbits based on the thickness dependence of quantum transport data require additional studies that demonstrate that these competing effects have been disentangled.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
May 01, 2019
Accession Number
AD1104345

Entities

People

  • David A Kealhofer
  • Luca Galletti
  • Manik Goyal
  • Susanne Stemmer
  • Timo Schumann

Organizations

  • University of California, Santa Barbara

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Advanced Electronics

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Charge Carriers
  • Department Of Defense
  • Elastic Scattering
  • Films
  • Hall Effect
  • Ion Beams
  • Low Temperature
  • Magnetic Fields
  • Materials
  • Measurement
  • Oscillation
  • Physical Properties
  • Scattering
  • Thickness
  • Thin Films
  • Two Dimensional
  • X Rays

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Materials Science and Engineering.
  • Quantum Dot Semiconductor Device Photonics and Graphene Optoelectronic Materials and THz Physics.

Technology Areas

  • Quantum Computing
  • Space