10 research outputs found

    Mechanically induced current and quantum evaporation from Luttinger liquids

    Full text link
    We investigate transport through a tunnelling junction between an uncorrelated metallic lead and a Luttinger liquid when the latter is subjected to a time dependent perturbation. The tunnelling current as well as the electron energy distribution function are found to be strongly affected by the perturbation due to generation of harmonics in the density oscillations. Using a semiconducting lead instead of a metallic one results in electrons being injected into the lead even without applied voltage. Some applications to carbon nanotubes are discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures (eps files

    Field emission from Luttinger liquids and single-wall carbon nanotubes

    Full text link
    We develop a theory for the field emission effect in Luttinger liquids and single-wall carbon nanotubes at the level of the energy resolved current distribution. We generalise Fowler-Nordheim relations. Just below the Fermi edge, we find a power-law vanishing current distribution with the density of states exponent. The current distribution above the Fermi edge owes its existence to a peculiar interplay of interactions and correlated tunnelling. It displays a non-trivial power-law divergence just above the Fermi energy.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures (eps files

    Kondo effect in crossed Luttinger liquids

    Full text link
    We study the Kondo effect in two crossed Luttinger liquids, using Boundary Conformal Field Theory. We predict two types of critical behaviors: either a two-channel Kondo fixed point with a nonuniversal Wilson ratio, or a new theory with an anomalous response identical to that found by Furusaki and Nagaosa (for the Kondo effect in a single Luttinger liquid). Moreover, we discuss the relevance of perturbations like channel anisotropy, and we make links with the Kondo effect in a two-band Hubbard system modeled by a channel-dependent Luttinger Hamiltonian. The suppression of backscattering off the impurity produces a model similar to the four-channel Kondo theory.Comment: 7 pages, RevteX, to be published in Physical Review

    Counting statistics for the Anderson impurity model: Bethe ansatz and Fermi liquid study

    Full text link
    We study the counting statistics of charge transport in the Anderson impurity model (AIM) employing both Keldysh perturbation theory in a Fermi liquid picture and the Bethe ansatz. In the Fermi liquid approach, the object of our principal interest is the generating function for the cumulants of the charge current distribution. We derive an exact analytic formula relating the full counting statistic (FCS) generating function to the self-energy of the system in the presence of a measuring field. We first check that our approach reproduces correctly known results in simple limits, like the FCS of the resonant level system (AIM without Coulomb interaction). We then proceed to study the FCS for the AIM perturbatively in the Coulomb interaction. By comparing this perturbative analysis with a strong coupling expansion, we arrive at a conjecture for an expression for the FCS generating function at O(V^3) (V is the voltage across the impurity) valid at all orders in the interaction. In the second part of the article, we examine a Bethe ansatz analysis of the current noise for the AIM. Unlike the Fermi liquid approach, here the goal is to obtain qualitative, not quantitative, results for a wider range of voltages both in and out of a magnetic field. Particularly notable are finite field results showing a double peaked structure in the current noise for voltages satisfying eV ~ mu H$. This double peaked structure is the ``smoking gun'' of Kondo physics in the current noise and is directly analogous to the single peak structure predicted for the differential conductance of the AIM.Comment: 39 pages, 5 figure

    Exact Fermi-edge singularity exponent in a Luttinger liquid

    Full text link
    We report the exact calculation of the Fermi-edge singularity exponent for correlated electrons in one dimension (Luttinger liquid). Focusing on the special interaction parameter g=1/2, the asymptotic long-time behavior can be obtained using the Wiener-Hopf method. The result confirms the previous assumption of an open boundary fixed point. In addition, a dynamic k-channel Kondo impurity is studied via Abelian bosonization for k=2 and k=4. It is shown that the corresponding orthogonality exponents are related to the orthogonality exponent in a Luttinger liquid.Comment: 8 Pages RevTeX, no figure

    Multi-particle effects in non-equilibrium electron tunnelling and field emission

    Full text link
    We investigate energy resolved electric current from various correlated host materials under out-of-equilibrium conditions. We find that, due to a combined effect of electron-electron interactions, non-equilibrium and multi-particle tunnelling, the energy resolved current is finite even above the Fermi edge of the host material. In most cases, the current density possesses a singularity at the Fermi level revealing novel manifestations of correlation effects in electron tunnelling. By means of the Keldysh non-equilibrium technique, the current density is calculated for one-dimensional interacting electron systems and for two-dimensional systems, both in the pure limit and in the presence of disorder. We then specialise to the field emission and provide a comprehensive theoretical study of this effect in carbon nanotubes.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figures (eps files

    Scaling and criticality of the Kondo effect in a Luttinger liquid

    Full text link
    A quantum Monte Carlo simulation method has been developed and applied to study the critical behavior of a single Kondo impurity in a Luttinger liquid. This numerically exact method has no finite-size limitations and allows to simulate the whole temperature range. Focusing on the impurity magnetic susceptibility, we determine the scaling functions, in particular for temperatures well below the Kondo temperature. In the absence of elastic potential scattering, we find Fermi-liquid behavior for strong electron-electron interactions, g_c < 1/2, and anomalous power laws for 1/2<g_c < 1, where g_c is the correlation parameter of the Luttinger liquid. These findings resolve a recent controversy. If elastic potential scattering is present, we find a logarithmically divergent impurity susceptibility at g_c<1/2 which can be rationalized in terms of the two-channel Kondo model.Comment: 11 pages REVTeX, incl. 9 PS figures, subm. to PR
    corecore