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Phonon-mediated room-temperature quantum Hall transport in graphene.

Daniel VaqueroVito ClericòMichael SchmitzJuan Antonio Delgado-NotarioAdrian Martín-RamosJuan Salvador-SánchezClaudius S A MüllerKm RubiKenji WatanabeTakashi TaniguchiBernd BeschotenChristoph StampferEnrique DiezMikhail I KatsnelsonUli ZeitlerSteffen WiedmannSergio Pezzini
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
The quantum Hall (QH) effect in two-dimensional electron systems (2DESs) is conventionally observed at liquid-helium temperatures, where lattice vibrations are strongly suppressed and bulk carrier scattering is dominated by disorder. However, due to large Landau level (LL) separation (~2000 K at B = 30 T), graphene can support the QH effect up to room temperature (RT), concomitant with a non-negligible population of acoustic phonons with a wave-vector commensurate to the inverse electronic magnetic length. Here, we demonstrate that graphene encapsulated in hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) realizes a novel transport regime, where dissipation in the QH phase is governed predominantly by electron-phonon scattering. Investigating thermally-activated transport at filling factor 2 up to RT in an ensemble of back-gated devices, we show that the high B-field behaviour correlates with their zero B-field transport mobility. By this means, we extend the well-accepted notion of phonon-limited resistivity in ultra-clean graphene to a hitherto unexplored high-field realm.
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