Coulomb drag experiments can give us information about the interaction state of double-layer systems. Here, we demonstrate anomalous Coulomb drag behaviours in a two-dimensional electron-electron bilayer system constructed by stacking atomically thin MoS2 on opposite sides of thin dielectric layers of boron nitride. In the low temperature regime, the measured drag resistance does not follow the behaviour predicted by the Coulomb drag models of exchanging momenta and energies with the particles in Fermi-liquid bilayer systems. Instead, it shows an upturn to higher and higher values. We investigate quantum solid/fluid phases and the Kosterlitz-Thouless/Wigner two-dimensional quantum melting transition in this bilayer system and describe this interesting phenomenon based on thermally activated carriers of quantum defects from the formation of the correlation-induced electron solid phases with enhanced stabilization by the potential due to the boron nitride dielectric layers.

Published : "arXiv Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics".