6,857 research outputs found

    Impurity effects in few-electron quantum dots: Incipient Wigner molecule regime

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    Numerically exact path-integral Monte Carlo data are presented for N10N\leq 10 strongly interacting electrons confined in a 2D parabolic quantum dot, including a defect to break rotational symmetry. Low densities are studied, where an incipient Wigner molecule forms. A single impurity is found to cause drastic effects: (1) The standard shell-filling sequence with magic numbers N=4,6,9N=4,6,9, corresponding to peaks in the addition energy Δ(N)\Delta(N), is destroyed, with a new peak at N=8, (2) spin gaps decrease, (3) for N=8, sub-Hund's rule spin S=0 is induced, and (4) spatial ordering of the electrons becomes rather sensitive to spin. We also comment on the recently observed bunching phenomenon.Comment: 7 pages, 1 table, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Europhysics Letter

    On the effects of irrelevant boundary scaling operators

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    We investigate consequences of adding irrelevant (or less relevant) boundary operators to a (1+1)-dimensional field theory, using the Ising and the boundary sine-Gordon model as examples. In the integrable case, irrelevant perturbations are shown to multiply reflection matrices by CDD factors: the low-energy behavior is not changed, while various high-energy behaviors are possible, including ``roaming'' RG trajectories. In the non-integrable case, a Monte Carlo study shows that the IR behavior is again generically unchanged, provided scaling variables are appropriately renormalized.Comment: 4 Pages RevTeX, 3 figures (eps files

    Doping- and size-dependent suppression of tunneling in carbon nanotubes

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    We study the effect of doping in the suppression of tunneling observed in multi-walled nanotubes, incorporating as well the influence of the finite dimensions of the system. A scaling approach allows us to encompass the different values of the critical exponent α\alpha measured for the tunneling density of states in carbon nanotubes. We predict that further reduction of α\alpha should be observed in multi-walled nanotubes with a sizeable amount of doping. In the case of nanotubes with a very large radius, we find a pronounced crossover between a high-energy regime with persistent quasiparticles and a low-energy regime with the properties of a one-dimensional conductor.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, LaTeX file, pacs: 71.10.Pm, 71.20.Tx, 72.80.R

    Transport in Double-Crossed Luttinger Liquids

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    We study transport through two Luttinger liquids (one-dimensional electrons interacting through a Coulomb repulsion in a metal) coupled together at {\it two} points. External voltage biases are incorporated through boundary conditions. We include density-density couplings as well as single-particle hops at the contacts. For weak repulsive interactions, transport through the wires remains undisturbed by the inter-wire couplings, which renormalise to zero. For strong repulsive interactions, the inter-wire couplings become strong. For symmetric barriers and no external voltage bias, a single gate voltage is sufficient to tune for resonance transmission in both wires. However, for asymmetric couplings or for finite external biases, the system is insulating.Comment: Latex file, 11 pages, one eps figur

    Transport through a double barrier for interacting quasi one-dimensional electrons in a Quantum Wire in the presence of a transverse magnetic field

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    We discuss the Luttinger Liquid behaviour of a semiconducting Quantum Wire. We show that the measured value of the bulk critical exponent, αbulk\alpha_{bulk}, for the tunneling density of states can be easily calculated. Then, the problem of the transport through a Quantum Dot formed by two Quantum Point Contacts along the Quantum Wire, weakly coupled to spinless Tomonaga-Luttinger liquids is studied, including the action of a strong transverse magnetic field BB. The known magnetic dependent peaks of the conductance, G(B)G(B), in the ballistic regime at a very low temperature, TT, have to be reflected also in the transport at higher TT and in different regimes. The temperature dependence of the maximum GmaxG_{max} of the conductance peak, according to the Correlated Sequential Tunneling theory, yields the power law GmaxT2αend1G_{max}\propto T^{2\alpha_{end}-1}, with the critical exponent, αend\alpha_{end}, strongly reduced by BB. This behaviour suggests the use of a similar device as a magnetic field modulated transistor.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure

    Coulomb Charging at Large Conduction

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    We discuss the suppression of Coulomb charging effects on a small metallic island coupled to an electrode by a tunnel junction. At high temperatures the quantum corrections to the classical charging energy Ec=e2/2CE_c=e^2/2C, where CC is the island capacitance, are evaluated. At low temperatures the large quantum fluctuations of the island charge cause a strong reduction of the effective EcE_c which is determined explicitly in the limit of a large tunneling conductance.Comment: 4 page
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