论文标题
超纯PDCOO $ _ {2} $中的非本地电动力学
Non-local electrodynamics in ultra-pure PdCoO$_{2}$
论文作者
论文摘要
绝大多数指挥中电子的运动是扩散的,遵守欧姆的定律。但是,最近发现和生长具有极长的电子平均自由路径的高纯度材料引起了人们对非欧马替代方案的兴趣,包括粘性和弹道流。尽管已经在一系列材料中发现了非欧摩的运输方式,包括二维电子气体,石墨烯,拓扑半学和Delafossite金属,确定其性质已被证明是具有挑战性的。在这里,我们在三种不同的样本几何形状中采用了Delafossite Metal Pdcoo $ _ {2} $的宽带微波光谱的新方法,在三种不同的样品几何形状中,这对于扩散运输来说是相同的。观察到的差异到不同的功率定律,它利用了pdcoo $ _ {2} $的六边形对称性。这允许针对非本地电动力学的特别优雅的基于对称性的诊断,结果有利于弹道而不是严格的流体动力流动。此外,由于六边形费米表面的高度形状,它发现了弹道电子流的新效果。我们将广泛的数据集与对玻尔兹曼方程的分析相结合,以表征PDCOO $ _ {2} $中的非本地制度。从更广泛的角度来看,我们的结果突出了宽带微波光谱的潜力,在研究新一代超高电导率材料中的外来运输方案中发挥了核心作用。
The motion of electrons in the vast majority of conductors is diffusive, obeying Ohm's law. However, the recent discovery and growth of high-purity materials with extremely long electronic mean free paths has sparked interest in non-ohmic alternatives, including viscous and ballistic flow. Although non-ohmic transport regimes have been discovered across a range of materials, including two-dimensional electron gases, graphene, topological semimetals, and the delafossite metals, determining their nature has proved to be challenging. Here, we report on a new approach to the problem, employing broadband microwave spectroscopy of the delafossite metal PdCoO$_{2}$ in three distinct sample geometries that would be identical for diffusive transport. The observed differences, which go as far as differing power laws, take advantage of the hexagonal symmetry of PdCoO$_{2}$. This permits a particularly elegant symmetry-based diagnostic for non-local electrodynamics, with the result favouring ballistic over strictly hydrodynamic flow. Furthermore, it uncovers a new effect for ballistic electron flow, owing to the highly facetted shape of the hexagonal Fermi surface. We combine our extensive dataset with an analysis of the Boltzmann equation to characterize the non-local regime in PdCoO$_{2}$. More broadly, our results highlight the potential of broadband microwave spectroscopy to play a central role in investigating exotic transport regimes in the new generation of ultra-high conductivity materials.