Abstract
We report both linear and nonlinear magnetoconductance measurements on two different density samples of similar stoichiometry ${\mathrm{Hg}}_{1\mathrm{\ensuremath{-}}\mathrm{x}}$${\mathrm{Cd}}_{\mathrm{x}}$Te for 0.01T2.5 K and 0H80 kOe. The critical magnetic field for driving the samples through the metal-insulator transition is proportional to temperature at low T and saturates at T\ensuremath{\sim}2 K, in quantitative agreement with a theory for the melting of a Wigner crystal in magnetic field. In the insulating state, we observe a non-Ohmic I-V characteristic at threshold electric fields less than 1 mV/cm. By analogy to theories for charge-density-wave depinning, we estimate that the electrons are correlated over regions of a few hundred lattice spacings. Finally, we map out the phase boundary between the low-T--high-H electron solid and the high-T--low-H correlated fluid, explicitly demonstrating the necessity of millikelvin temperatures for studying the relative roles of disorder and Coulomb interactions in the electron solid.
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