157 research outputs found

    Visibility diagrams and experimental stripe structure in the quantum Hall effect

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    We analyze various properties of the visibility diagrams that can be used in the context of modular symmetries and confront them to some recent experimental developments in the Quantum Hall Effect. We show that a suitable physical interpretation of the visibility diagrams which permits one to describe successfully the observed architecture of the Quantum Hall states gives rise naturally to a stripe structure reproducing some of the experimental features that have been observed in the study of the quantum fluctuations of the Hall conductance. Furthermore, we exhibit new properties of the visibility diagrams stemming from the structure of subgroups of the full modular group.Comment: 8 pages in plain TeX, 7 figures in a single postscript fil

    The quantized Hall effect in the presence of resistance fluctuations

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    We present an experimental study of mesoscopic, two-dimensional electronic systems at high magnetic fields. Our samples, prepared from a low-mobility InGaAs/InAlAs wafer, exhibit reproducible, sample specific, resistance fluctuations. Focusing on the lowest Landau level we find that, while the diagonal resistivity displays strong fluctuations, the Hall resistivity is free of fluctuations and remains quantized at its ν=1\nu=1 value, h/e2h/e^{2}. This is true also in the insulating phase that terminates the quantum Hall series. These results extend the validity of the semicircle law of conductivity in the quantum Hall effect to the mesoscopic regime.Comment: Includes more data, changed discussio

    Mesoscopic oscillations of the conductance of disordered metallic samples as a function of temperature

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    We show theoretically and experimentally that the conductance of small disordered samples exhibits random oscillations as a function of temperature. The amplitude of the oscillations decays as a power law of temperature, and their characteristic period is of the order of the temperature itself

    Conductance Correlations Near Integer Quantum Hall Transitions

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    In a disordered mesoscopic system, the typical spacing between the peaks and the valleys of the conductance as a function of Fermi energy EFE_F is called the conductance energy correlation range EcE_c. Under the ergodic hypothesis, the latter is determined by the half-width of the ensemble averaged conductance correlation function: F=F= . In ordinary diffusive metals, Ec∼D/L2E_c\sim D/L^2, where DD is the diffusion constant and LL is the linear dimension of the phase-coherent sample. However, near a quantum phase transition driven by the location of the Fermi energy EFE_F, the above picture breaks down. As an example of the latter, we study, for the first time, the conductance correlations near the integer quantum Hall transitions of which EFE_F is a critical coupling constant. We point out that the behavior of FF is determined by the interplay between the static and the dynamic properties of the critical phenomena.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, minor corrections, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let

    Charge Pumping in Carbon Nanotubes

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    We demonstrate charge pumping in semiconducting carbon nanotubes by a traveling potential wave. From the observation of pumping in the nanotube insulating state we deduce that transport occurs by packets of charge being carried along by the wave. By tuning the potential of a side gate, transport of either electron or hole packets can be realized. Prospects for the realization of nanotube based single-electron pumps are discussed

    Two-terminal conductance fluctuations in the integer quantum Hall regime

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    Motivated by recent experiments on the conductance fluctuations in mesoscopic integr quantum Hall systems, we consider a model in which the Coulomb interactions are incorporated into the picture of edge-state transport through a single saddle-point. The occupancies of `classical' localised states in the two-dimensional electron system change due to the interactions between electrons when the gate voltage on top of the device is varied. The electrostatic potential between the localised states and the saddle-point causes fluctuations of the saddle-point potential and thus fluctuations of the transmission probability of edge states. This simple model is studied numerically and compared with the observation.Comment: 6 pages with 3 figures. To be published in Physical Review

    Coherent Single Charge Transport in Molecular-Scale Silicon Nanowire Transistors

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    We report low-temperature electrical transport studies of molecule-scale silicon nanowires. Individual nanowires exhibit well-defined Coulomb blockade oscillations characteristic of charge addition to a single nanostructure with length scales up to at least 400 nm. Further studies demonstrate coherent charge transport through discrete single particle quantum levels extending the whole device, and show that the ground state spin configuration follows the Lieb-Mattis theorem. In addition, depletion of the nanowires suggests that phase coherent single-dot characteristics are accessible in a regime where correlations are strong.Comment: 4 pages and 4 figure

    The origin of switching noise in GaAs/AlGaAs lateral gated devices

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    We have studied the origin of switching (telegraph) noise at low temperature in lateral quantum structures defined electrostatically in GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures by surface gates. The noise was measured by monitoring the conductance fluctuations around e2/he^2/h on the first step of a quantum point contact at around 1.2 K. Cooling with a positive bias on the gates dramatically reduces this noise, while an asymmetric bias exacerbates it. We propose a model in which the noise originates from a leakage current of electrons that tunnel through the Schottky barrier under the gate into the doped layer. The key to reducing noise is to keep this barrier opaque under experimental conditions. Bias cooling reduces the density of ionized donors, which builds in an effective negative gate voltage. A smaller negative bias is therefore needed to reach the desired operating point. This suppresses tunnelling from the gate and hence the noise. The reduction in the density of ionized donors also strengthens the barrier to tunneling at a given applied voltage. Support for the model comes from our direct observation of the leakage current into a closed quantum dot, around 10−20A10^{-20} \mathrm{A} for this device. The current was detected by a neighboring quantum point contact, which showed monotonic steps in time associated with the tunneling of single electrons into the dot. If asymmetric gate voltages are applied, our model suggests that the noise will increase as a consequence of the more negative gate voltage applied to one of the gates to maintain the same device conductance. We observe exactly this behaviour in our experiments.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
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