Quantum oscillations in a dipolar excitonic insulator
Article 2025 en
Authors
PN
Phuong X. Nguyen
RC
Raghav Chaturvedi
BZ
Bo Zou
Abstract
1 min read
Quantum oscillations in magnetization or resistivity are a defining feature of metals in a magnetic field. The phenomenon is generally not expected in insulators without a Fermi surface. Its observation in Kondo and other correlated insulators provided counterexamples and remains poorly understood. Here we report the observation of resistivity oscillations in a gate-controlled excitonic insulator realized in Coulomb-coupled electron-hole double layers. When the electron or hole cyclotron energy is tuned to exceed the exciton binding energy, recurring transitions arise between the excitonic insulator and layer-decoupled quantum Hall states. Compressibility measurements show an oscillatory exciton binding energy as a function of the magnetic field and electron-hole pair density. Coulomb drag measurements further reveal the signature of finite-angular-momentum excitonic correlations. These findings are qualitatively captured by mean-field calculations. Our study establishes a highly tunable platform based on electron-hole double layers for studying quantum oscillations in correlated insulators.
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