Samuel F. Neyens
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Erratum
The critical role of substrate disorder in valley splitting in Si quantum wells (Applied Physics Letters (2018) 112 (243107) DOI: 10.1063/1.5033447)
In the original published article,1 a typographical error was discovered in the horizontal axis labels of Fig. 3(a), right panel: instead of 4, 5, and 6, these axis labels should be 4, 6, and 8. We have adjusted Fig. 3 here to correct this error. This error was confined to the making of the figure and did not affect any of the data analysis. All conclusions from the original published article are unchanged. (Figure Presented).
Atomic-scale disorder at the top interface of a Si quantum well is known to suppress valley splitting. Such disorder may be inherited from the underlying substrate and relaxed buffer growth, but can also arise at the top quantum well interface due to the random SiGe alloy. Here, we perform activation energy (transport) measurements in the quantum Hall regime to determine the source of the disorder affecting the valley splitting. We consider three Si/SiGe heterostructures with nominally identical substrates but different barriers at the top of the quantum well, including two samples with pure-Ge interfaces. For all three samples, we observe a surprisingly strong and universal dependence of the valley splitting on the electron density (Ev ∼ n2.7) over the entire experimental range (Ev = 30-200 μeV). We interpret these results via tight binding theory, arguing that the underlying valley physics is determined mainly by disorder arising from the substrate and relaxed buffer growth.