Quantized Ballistic Transport of Electrons and Electron Pairs in LaAlO3/SrTiO3 Nanowires

Abstract

SrTiO3-based heterointerfaces support quasi-two-dimensional (2D) electron systems that are analogous to III-V semiconductor heterostructures, but also possess superconducting, magnetic, spintronic, ferroelectric, and ferroelastic degrees of freedom. Despite these rich properties, the relatively low mobilities of 2D complex-oxide interfaces appear to preclude ballistic transport in 1D. Here we show that the 2D LaAlO3/SrTiO3 interface can support quantized ballistic transport of electrons and (non-superconducting) electron pairs within quasi-1D structures that are created using a well-established conductive atomic-force microscope (c-AFM) lithography technique. The nature of transport ranges from truly single-mode (1D) to three-dimensional (3D), depending on the applied magnetic field and gate voltage. Quantization of the lowest e2/h plateau indicate a ballistic mean-free path lMF 20 μm, more than two orders of magnitude larger than for 2D LaAlO3/SrTiO3 heterostructures. Non-superconducting electron pairs are found to be stable in magnetic fields as high as B=11 T, and propagate ballistically with conductance quantized at 2e2/h. Theories of one-dimensional (1D) transport of interacting electron systems depend crucially on the sign of the electron-electron interaction, which may help explain the highly ballistic transport behavior. The 1D geometry yields new insights into the electronic structure of the LaAlO3/SrTiO3 system and offers a new platform for the study of strongly interacting 1D electronic systems.

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