Abstract

In this work intentionally disordered two-dimensional electron systems in modulation doped GaAs/GaAlAs heterostructures are studied by magnetotransport experiments. The disorder is provided by a δ-doped layer of negatively charged beryllium acceptors. In low magnetic fields a strong negative magnetoresistance is observed that can be ascribed to magnetic-field-induced delocalization. At increased magnetic fields the quantum Hall effect exhibits broad Hall plateaus whose centers are shifted to higher magnetic fields, i.e. lower filling factors. This shift can be explained by an asymmetric density of states. Consistently, the transition into the insulating state of quantum Hall droplets in high magnetic fields occurs at critical filling factors around νc=0.4, i.e. well below the value 1/2 that is expected for symmetric disorder potentials. The insulator transition is characterized by the divergence of both the longitudinal resistance as well as the Hall resistance. This is contrary to other experiments which observe a finite Hall resistance in the insulating regime and has not been observed previously. According to recent theoretical studies the divergence of the Hall resistance points to quantum coherent transport via tunneling between quantum Hall droplets. The magnetotransport experiments are supplemented by simulations of potential landscapes for random and correlated distributions of repulsive scatterers, which enable the determination of percolation thresholds, densities of states, and oscillator strengths for far-infrared excitations. These simulations reveal that the strong shift of the Hall plateaus and the observed critical filling factor for the insulator transition in high magnetic fields require an asymmetric density of states that can only be generated by a strongly correlated beryllium distribution. Cyclotron resonance on the same samples also indicates the possibility of correlations between the beryllium acceptors.

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