46 research outputs found
Dynamical correlations in electronic transport through a system of coupled quantum dots
Current auto- and cross-correlations are studied in a system of two
capacitively coupled quantum dots. We are interested in a role of Coulomb
interaction in dynamical correlations, which occur outside the Coulomb blockade
region (for high bias). After decomposition of the current correlation
functions into contributions between individual tunneling events, we can show
which of them are relevant and lead to sub-/supper-Poissonian shot noise and
negative/positive cross-correlations. The results are differentiated for a weak
and strong inter-dot coupling. Interesting results are for the strong coupling
case when electron transfer in one of the channel is strongly correlated with
charge drag in the second channel. We show that cross-correlations are
non-monotonic functions of bias voltage and they are in general negative
(except some cases with asymmetric tunnel resistances). This is effect of local
potential fluctuations correlated by Coulomb interaction, which mimics the
Pauli exclusion principle
Superconductivity in the Hubbard model with correlated hopping: Slave-boson study
The slave boson mean-field studies of the ground state of the Hubbard model
with correlated hopping were performed. The approach qualitatively recovers the
exact results for the case of the hopping integral t equal to the correlated
hopping integral X. The phase diagram for the strongly correlated state with
only singly occupied sites, the weakly correlated state, where single and
double occupation is allowed, and for the superconducting state, was determined
for any values of X and any electron concentration n. At the half-filled band
(n=1) a direct transition from the superconductor to the Mott insulator was
found. In the region of strong correlations the superconducting solution is
stable for n close to 1, in contrast to the case of weak correlations, in which
superconductivity occurs at n close to 0 and n close to 2. We found also that
strong correlations change characteristics of the superconducting phase, e.g.
the gap in the excitation spectrum has a nonexponential dependence close to the
point of the phase transition.Comment: 13 pages, 24 Postscript figures (in 12 files
Current and power spectrum in a magnetic tunnel device with an atomic size spacer
Current and its noise in a ferromagnetic double tunnel barrier device with a
small spacer particle were studied in the framework of the sequential tunneling
approach. Analytical formulae were derived for electron tunneling through the
spacer particle containing only a single energy level. It was shown that
Coulomb interactions of electrons with a different spin orientation lead to an
increase of the tunnel magnetoresistance. Interactions can also be responsible
for the negative differential resistance. A current noise study showed, which
relaxation processes can enhance or reduce fluctuations leading either to a
super-Poissonian or a sub-Poissonian shot noise.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Charge fluctuations and feedback effect in shot noise in a Y-terminal system
We investigate a dynamical Coulomb blockade effect and its role in the
enhancement of current-current correlations in a three-terminal device with a
multilevel splitter, as well as with two quantum dots. Spectral decomposition
analysis shows that in the Y-terminal system with a two level ideal splitter,
charge fluctuations at a level with a lowest outgoing tunneling rate are
responsible for a super-Poissonian shot noise and positive cross-correlations.
Interestingly, for larger source-drain voltages, electrons are transferred as
independent particles, when three levels participate in transport, and double
occupancy is allowed. We can explain compensation of the current correlations
as the interplay between different bunching and antibunching processes by
performing a spectral decomposition of the correlation functions for partial
currents flowing through various levels. In the system with two quantum dots
acting as a splitter, a long range feedback effect of fluctuating potentials
leads to the dynamical Coulomb blockade and an enhancement of shot noise.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figure
Nonequilibrium Steady States and Fano-Kondo Resonances in an AB Ring with a Quantum Dot
Electron transport through a strongly correlated quantum dot (QD) embedded in
an Aharonov-Bohm (AB) ring is investigated with the aid of the finite-U
slave-boson mean-field (SBMF) approach extended to nonequilibrium regime. A
nonequilibrium steady state (NESS) of the mean-field Hamiltonian is constructed
with the aid of the C*-algebraic approach for studying infinitely extended
systems. In the linear response regime, the Fano-Kondo resonances and AB
oscillations of the conductance obtained from the SBMF approach are in good
agreement with those from the numerical renormalization group technique (NRG)
by Hofstetter et al. by using twice larger Coulomb interaction. At zero
temperature and finite bias voltage, the resonance peaks of the differential
conductance tend to split into two. At low bias voltage, the split of the
asymmetric resonance can be observed as an increase of the conductance plateau.
We also found that the differential conductance has zero-bias maximum or
minimum depending on the background transmission via direct tunneling between
the electrodes.Comment: 24 pages,17 figure
Shot noise in ferromagnetic single electron tunneling devices
Frequency dependent current noise in ferromagnetic double junctions with
Coulomb blockade is studied theoretically in the limit of sequential tunneling.
Two different relaxation processes are found in the correlations between spin
polarized tunneling currents; low frequency spin fluctuations and high
frequency charge fluctuations. Spin accumulation in strongly asymmetric
junctions is shown to lead to a negative differential resistance. We also show
that large spin noise activated in the range of negative differential
resistance gives rise to a significant enhancement of the current noise.Comment: 8 pages, 13 eps-figures include