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University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Theory of Condensed Matter > Non-conservation of the valley density and its implications for the observation of the valley Hall effect
Non-conservation of the valley density and its implications for the observation of the valley Hall effectAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Gaurav. We show that the conservation of the valley density in multi-valley insulators is broken in an unexpected way by the electric field that drives the valley Hall effect. This implies that time-reversal-invariant fully-gapped insulators, in which no bulk or edge state crosses the Fermi level, can support a valley Hall current in the bulk and yet show no valley density accumulation at the edges. Thus, the valley Hall effect cannot be observed in such systems. If the system is not fully gapped then valley density accumulation at the edges is possible. The accumulation has no contribution from undergap states and can be expressed as a Fermi surface average, for which we derive an explicit formula. We demonstrate the theory by calculating the valley density accumulations in an archetypical valley-Hall insulator: a gapped graphene nanoribbon. Surprisingly, we discover that a net valley density polarization is dynamically generated for certain edge terminations. This talk is part of the Theory of Condensed Matter series. This talk is included in these lists:
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