225 research outputs found

    Magnon-driven quantum-dot heat engine

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    We investigate a heat- to charge-current converter consisting of a single-level quantum dot coupled to two ferromagnetic metals and one ferromagnetic insulator held at different temperatures. We demonstrate that this nano engine can act as an optimal heat to spin-polarized charge current converter in an antiparallel geometry, while it acts as a heat to pure spin current converter in the parallel case. We discuss the maximal output power of the device and its efficiency.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, published version, selected as Editor's choic

    Thermoelectric effects in Kondo correlated quantum dots

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    In this Letter we study thermoelectric effects in ultra small quantum dots. We study the behaviour of the thermopower, Peltier coefficient and thermal conductance both in the sequencial tunneling regime and in the regime where Kondo correlations develope. Both cases of linear response and non-equilibrium induced by strong temperature gradients are considered. The thermopower is a very sensitive tool to detect Kondo correlations. It changes sign both as a function of temperature and temperature gradient. We also discuss violations of the Wiedemann-Franz law.Comment: 7 pages; 5 figure

    Modulation of Thermoelectric Power of Individual Carbon Nanotubes

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    Thermoelectric power (TEP) of individual single walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) has been measured at mesoscopic scales using a microfabricated heater and thermometers. Gate electric field dependent TEP-modulation has been observed. The measured TEP of SWNTs is well correlated to the electrical conductance across the SWNT according to the Mott formula. At low temperatures, strong modulations of TEP were observed in the single electron conduction limit. In addition, semiconducting SWNTs exhibit large values of TEP due to the Schottky barriers at SWNT-metal junctions.Comment: to be published in Phys. Rev. Let

    Lineshape of the thermopower of quantum dots

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    Quantum dots are an important model system for thermoelectric phenomena, and may be used to enhance the thermal-to-electric energy conversion efficiency in functional materials. It is therefore important to obtain a detailed understanding of a quantum-dot's thermopower as a function of the Fermi energy. However, so far it has proven difficult to take effects of co-tunnelling into account in the interpretation of experimental data. Here we show that a single-electron tunnelling model, using knowledge of the dot's electrical conductance which in fact includes all-order co-tunneling effects, predicts the thermopower of quantum dots as a function of the relevant energy scales, in very good agreement with experiment.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure

    Cotunneling thermopower of single electron transistors

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    We study the thermopower of a quantum dot weakly coupled to two reservoirs by tunnel junctions. At low temperatures the transport through the dot is suppressed by charging effects (Coulomb blockade). As a result the thermopower shows an oscillatory dependence on the gate voltage. We study this dependence in the limit of low temperatures where the transport through the dot is dominated by the processes of inelastic cotunneling. We also obtain a crossover formula for intermediate temperatures which connects our cotunneling results to the known sawtooth behavior in the sequential tunneling regime. As the temperature is lowered, the amplitude of thermopower oscillations increases, and their shape changes qualitatively.Comment: 9 pages, including 4 figure

    Coulomb Blockade Oscillations in the Thermopower of Open Quantum Dots

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    We consider Coulomb blockade oscillations of thermoelectric coefficients of a single electron transistor based on a quantum dot strongly coupled to one of the leads. Analytic expression for the thermopower as a function of temperature TT and the reflection amplitude rr in the quantum point contact is obtained. Two regimes can be identified: TECr2T \ll E_C|r|^2 and TECr2T \gg E_C |r|^2, where ECE_C is the charging energy of the dot. The former regime is characterized by weak logarithmic dependence of the thermopower on the reflection coefficient, in the latter the thermopower is linear in the reflection coefficient r2|r|^2 but depends on temperature only logarithmically.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur

    Thermopower of a single electron transistor in the regime of strong inelastic cotunneling

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    We study Coulomb blockade oscillations of thermoelectric coefficients of a single electron transistor based on a quantum dot strongly coupled to one of the leads by a quantum point contact. At temperatures below the charging energy E_C the transport of electrons is dominated by strong inelastic cotunneling. In this regime we find analytic expressions for the thermopower as a function of temperature T and the reflection amplitude rr in the contact. In the case when the electron spins are polarized by a strong external magnetic field, the thermopower shows sinusoidal oscillations as a function of the gate voltage with the amplitude of the order of e1rTECe^{-1}|r|\frac{T}{E_C}. We obtain qualitatively different results in the absence of the magnetic field. At temperatures between ECE_C and ECr2E_C|r|^2 the thermopower oscillations are sinusoidal with the amplitude of order e1r2lnECTe^{-1}|r|^2 \ln \frac{E_C}{T}. On the other hand, at TECr2T\ll E_C|r|^2 we find non-sinusoidal oscillations of the thermopower with the amplitude e1rT/ECln(EC/T)\sim e^{-1} |r| \sqrt{T/E_C} \ln(E_C/T).Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure

    Aharonov-Bohm-Type Oscillations of Thermopower in a Quantum Dot Ring Geometry

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    We investigate Aharonov-Bohm-type oscillations of the thermopower of a quantum dot embedded in a ring for the case when the interaction between electrons can be neglected. The thermopower is shown to be strongly flux dependent, and typically the amplitude of oscillations exceeds the background value. It is also shown to be essentially dependent on the phase of the scattering matrix which is determined by the experimental geometry and is not known in the given experiment. Two procedures to compare theory and experiment are proposed.Comment: Revtex, 5 figures include

    Thermal rectification effect of an interacting quantum dot

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    We investigate nonlinear thermal transport properties of a single interacting quantum dot with two energy levels tunnel-coupled to two electrodes using nonequilibrium Green function method and Hartree-Fock decoupling approximation. In the case of asymmetric tunnel-couplings to two electrodes, for example, when the upper level of the quantum dot is open for transport, whereas the lower level is blocked, our calculations predict a strong asymmetry for the heat (energy) current, which shows that, the quantum dot system may act as a thermal rectifier in this specific situation.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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