Abstract

We describe our study of ballistic transport in nanostructures of lead telluride, PbTe. Submicron devices have been fabricated by electron beam lithography and chemical etching of 50 nm wide PbTe single quantum wells embedded between Pb 0.92Eu 0.08Te barriers grown by MBE on BaF 2. The electron concentration in the devices was tuned by the gate voltage applied across an interfacial p–n junction. The most important observation was zero-magnetic field conductance quantization (in multiplies of 2 e 2/ h) in narrow constrictions of dimensions comparable to electron mean free path calculated from transport mobility. This indicates considerable relaxation of requirements for quantum ballistic transport in comparison with other materials. We argue that the huge static dielectric constant of PbTe ( ε 0=1350 at 4.2 K ) leads to suppression of the long-range Coulomb potentials of charged impurities and, thus, provides favorable conditions for the conductance quantization.

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