Imaging the breaking of electrostatic dams in graphene for ballistic and viscous fluids
Article 2023 en
Authors
ZK
Zachary J. Krebs
WB
Wyatt A. Behn
SL
Songci Li
Abstract
1 min read
The charge carriers in a material can, under special circumstances, behave as a viscous fluid. In this work, we investigated such behavior by using scanning tunneling potentiometry to probe the nanometer-scale flow of electron fluids in graphene as they pass through channels defined by smooth and tunable in-plane p-n junction barriers. We observed that as the sample temperature and channel widths are increased, the electron fluid flow undergoes a Knudsen-to-Gurzhi transition from the ballistic to the viscous regime characterized by a channel conductance that exceeds the ballistic limit, as well as suppressed charge accumulation against the barriers. Our results are well modeled by finite element simulations of two-dimensional viscous current flow, and they illustrate how Fermi liquid flow evolves with carrier density, channel width, and temperature.
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