940 research outputs found
Thermoelectric effects in Kondo correlated quantum dots
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
Mechanical Cooper pair transportation as a source of long distance superconducting phase coherence
Transportation of Cooper-pairs by a movable single Cooper-pair-box placed
between two remote superconductors is shown to establish coherent coupling
between them. This coupling is due to entanglement of the movable box with the
leads and is manifested in the supression of quantum fluctuations of the
relative phase of the order parameters of the leads. It can be probed by
attaching a high resistance Josephson junction between the leads and measuring
the current through this junction. The current is suppressed with increasing
temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, RevTeX; Updated version, typos correcte
Influence of nano-mechanical properties on single electron tunneling: A vibrating Single-Electron Transistor
We describe single electron tunneling through molecular structures under the
influence of nano-mechanical excitations. We develop a full quantum mechanical
model, which includes charging effects and dissipation, and apply it to the
vibrating C single electron transistor experiment by Park {\em et al.}
{[Nature {\bf 407}, 57 (2000)].} We find good agreement and argue vibrations to
be essential to molecular electronic systems. We propose a mechanism to realize
negative differential conductance using local bosonic excitations.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Phonon distributions of a single bath mode coupled to a quantum dot
The properties of an unconventional, single mode phonon bath coupled to a
quantum dot, are investigated within the rotating wave approximation. The
electron current through the dot induces an out of equilibrium bath, with a
phonon distribution qualitatively different from the thermal one. In selected
transport regimes, such a distribution is characterized by a peculiar selective
population of few phonon modes and can exhibit a sub-Poissonian behavior. It is
shown that such a sub-Poissonian behavior is favored by a double occupancy of
the dot. The crossover from a unequilibrated to a conventional thermal bath is
explored, and the limitations of the rotating wave approximation are discussed.Comment: 21 Pages, 7 figures, to appear in New Journal of Physics - Focus on
Quantum Dissipation in Unconventional Environment
Electromechanics of charge shuttling in dissipative nanostructures
We investigate the current-voltage (IV) characteristics of a model
single-electron transistor where mechanical motion, subject to strong
dissipation, of a small metallic grain is possible. The system is studied both
by using Monte Carlo simulations and by using an analytical approach. We show
that electromechanical coupling results in a highly nonlinear IV-curve. For
voltages above the Coulomb blockade threshold, two distinct regimes of charge
transfer occur: At low voltages the system behave as a static asymmetric double
junction and tunneling is the dominating charge transfer mechanism. At higher
voltages an abrupt transition to a new shuttle regime appears, where the grain
performs an oscillatory motion back and forth between the leads. In this regime
the current is mainly mediated by charges that are carried on the grain as it
moves from one lead to the other.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, final version to be published in PR
Aharonov-Bohm Effect for Parallel and T-shaped Double Quantum Dots
We investigate the Aharonov-Bohm (AB) effect for the double quantum dots in
the Kondo regime using the slave-boson mean-field approximation. In contrast to
the non-interacting case, where the AB oscillation generally has the period of
4 when the two-subring structure is formed via the interdot tunneling
, we find that the AB oscillation has the period of 2 in the Kondo
regime. Such effects appear for the double quantum dots close to the T-shaped
geometry even in the charge-fluctuation regime. These results follow from the
fact that the Kondo resonance is always fixed to the Fermi level irrespective
of the detailed structure of the bare dot-levels.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures; minor change
Dephasing in sequential tunneling through a double-dot interferometer
We analyze dephasing in a model system where electrons tunnel sequentially
through a symmetric interference setup consisting of two single-level quantum
dots. Depending on the phase difference between the two tunneling paths, this
may result in perfect destructive interference. However, if the dots are
coupled to a bath, it may act as a which-way detector, leading to partial
suppression of the phase-coherence and the reappearance of a finite tunneling
current. In our approach, the tunneling is treated in leading order whereas
coupling to the bath is kept to all orders (using P(E) theory). We discuss the
influence of different bath spectra on the visibility of the interference
pattern, including the distinction between "mere renormalization effects" and
"true dephasing".Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures; For a tutorial introduction to dephasing see
http://iff.physik.unibas.ch/~florian/dephasing/dephasing.htm
Thermal rectification effect of an interacting quantum dot
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
Filtering spin with tunnel-coupled electron wave guides
We show how momentum-resolved tunneling between parallel electron wave guides
can be used to observe and exploit lifting of spin degeneracy due to Rashba
spin-orbit coupling. A device is proposed that achieves spin filtering without
using ferromagnets or the Zeeman effect.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, RevTex
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