Abstract

The effect of a dc electric field on the longitudinal resistance of highly mobile two-dimensional (2D) electrons in heavily doped GaAs quantum wells is studied at different magnetic fields and temperatures. Strong suppression of the resistance by the electric field is observed in magnetic fields at which the Landau quantization of electron motion occurs. The phenomenon survives at high temperature where Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations are absent. The scale of the electric fields essential for the effect is found to be proportional to temperature in the low temperature limit. We suggest that the strong reduction of the longitudinal resistance is the result of a nontrivial change in the distribution function of 2D electrons induced by the dc electric field. Comparison of the data with recent theory yields the inelastic electron-electon scattering time ${\ensuremath{\tau}}_{\mathrm{in}}$ and the quantum scattering time ${\ensuremath{\tau}}_{q}$ of the electrons at high temperatures, a regime where previous methods were not successful.

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