175 research outputs found
Primary thermometry triad at 6 mK in mesoscopic circuits
Quantum physics emerge and develop as temperature is reduced. Although
mesoscopic electrical circuits constitute an outstanding platform to explore
quantum behavior, the challenge in cooling the electrons impedes their
potential. The strong coupling of such micrometer-scale devices with the
measurement lines, combined with the weak coupling to the substrate, makes them
extremely difficult to thermalize below 10 mK and imposes in-situ thermometers.
Here we demonstrate electronic quantum transport at 6 mK in micrometer-scale
mesoscopic circuits. The thermometry methods are established by the comparison
of three in-situ primary thermometers, each involving a different underlying
physics. The employed combination of quantum shot noise, quantum back-action of
a resistive circuit and conductance oscillations of a single-electron
transistor covers a remarkably broad spectrum of mesoscopic phenomena. The
experiment, performed in vacuum using a standard cryogen-free dilution
refrigerator, paves the way toward the sub-millikelvin range with additional
thermalization and refrigeration techniques.Comment: Article and Supplementar
Wigner and Kondo physics in quantum point contacts revealed by scanning gate microscopy
Quantum point contacts exhibit mysterious conductance anomalies in addition
to well known conductance plateaus at multiples of 2e^2/h. These 0.7 and
zero-bias anomalies have been intensively studied, but their microscopic origin
in terms of many-body effects is still highly debated. Here we use the charged
tip of a scanning gate microscope to tune in situ the electrostatic potential
of the point contact. While sweeping the tip distance, we observe repetitive
splittings of the zero-bias anomaly, correlated with simultaneous appearances
of the 0.7 anomaly. We interpret this behaviour in terms of alternating
equilibrium and non-equilibrium Kondo screenings of different spin states
localized in the channel. These alternating Kondo effects point towards the
presence of a Wigner crystal containing several charges with different
parities. Indeed, simulations show that the electron density in the channel is
low enough to reach one-dimensional Wigner crystallization over a size
controlled by the tip position
Circuit Quantum Simulation of a Tomonaga-Luttinger Liquid with an Impurity
The Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid (TLL) concept is believed to generically
describe the strongly-correlated physics of one-dimensional systems at low
temperatures. A hallmark signature in 1D conductors is the quantum phase
transition between metallic and insulating states induced by a single impurity.
However, this transition impedes experimental explorations of real-world TLLs.
Furthermore, its theoretical treatment, explaining the universal energy
rescaling of the conductance at low temperatures, has so far been achieved
exactly only for specific interaction strengths. Quantum simulation can provide
a powerful workaround. Here, a hybrid metal-semiconductor dissipative quantum
circuit is shown to implement the analogue of a TLL of adjustable electronic
interactions comprising a single, fully tunable scattering impurity.
Measurements reveal the renormalization group `beta-function' for the
conductance that completely determines the TLL universal crossover to an
insulating state upon cooling. Moreover, the characteristic scaling energy
locating at a given temperature the position within this conductance
renormalization flow is established over nine decades versus circuit
parameters, and the out-of-equilibrium regime is explored. With the quantum
simulator quality demonstrated from the precise parameter-free validation of
existing and novel TLL predictions, quantum simulation is achieved in a strong
sense, by elucidating interaction regimes which resist theoretical solutions.Comment: To be published in Phys. Rev.
Heat Coulomb Blockade of One Ballistic Channel
Quantum mechanics and Coulomb interaction dictate the behavior of small
circuits. The thermal implications cover fundamental topics from quantum
control of heat to quantum thermodynamics, with prospects of novel thermal
machines and an ineluctably growing influence on nanocircuit engineering.
Experimentally, the rare observations thus far include the universal thermal
conductance quantum and heat interferometry. However, evidences for many-body
thermal effects paving the way to markedly different heat and electrical
behaviors in quantum circuits remain wanting. Here we report on the observation
of the Coulomb blockade of electronic heat flow from a small metallic circuit
node, beyond the widespread Wiedemann-Franz law paradigm. We demonstrate this
thermal many-body phenomenon for perfect (ballistic) conduction channels to the
node, where it amounts to the universal suppression of precisely one quantum of
conductance for the transport of heat, but none for electricity. The
inter-channel correlations that give rise to such selective heat current
reduction emerge from local charge conservation, in the floating node over the
full thermal frequency range (temperature).
This observation establishes the different nature of the quantum laws for
thermal transport in nanocircuits.Comment: Letter: 5 pages including 3 figures; Methods: 3 pages and 4 figure
Reverse electrochemical etching method for fabricating ultra-sharp platinum/iridium tips for combined scanning tunneling microscope/ atomic force microscope based on a quartz tuning fork
International audienceSharp Pt/Ir tips have been reproducibly etched by an electrochemical process using an inverse geometry of an electrochemical cell and a dedicated electronic device which allows us to control the applied voltages waveform and the intensity of the etching current. Conductive tips with a radius smaller than 10 nm were routinely produced as shown by field emission measurements through FowlereNordheim plots. These etched tips were then fixed on a quartz tuning fork force sensor working in a qPlus configuration to check their performances for both scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging. Their sharpness and conductivity are evidenced by the resolution achieved in STM and AFM images obtained of epitaxial graphene on 6H-SiC(0001) surface. The structure of an epitaxial graphene layer thermally grown on the 6H-SiC(0001) (6R3x6R3)R30° reconstructed surface, was successfully imaged at room temperature with STM, dynamic STM and by frequency modulated AFM
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