459 research outputs found
Performance analysis of an interacting quantum dot thermoelectric system
We analyze the nanocaloritronic performance of an interacting quantum dot
that is subject to an applied bias and an applied temperature gradient. It is
now well known that, in the absence of phonon contribution, a weakly coupled
non-interacting quantum dot can operate at thermoelectric efficiencies
approaching the Carnot limit. However, it has also been recently pointed out
that such peak efficiencies can only be achieved when operated in the
reversible limit, with a vanishing current and hence a vanishing power output.
In this paper, we point out three fundamental results affecting the
thermoelectric performance due to the inclusion of Coulomb interactions: a) The
reversible operating point carries zero efficiency, b) operation at finite
power output is possible even at peak efficiencies approaching the Carnot
value, and c) the evaluated trends of the the maximum efficiency deviate
considerably from the conventional {\it{figure of merit}} based result.
Finally, we also analyze our system for thermoelectric operation at maximum
power output.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, Resubmission- to be published in Phys. Rev.
Phonon-assisted tunneling in interacting suspended single wall carbon nanotubes
Transport in suspended metallic single wall carbon nanotubes in the presence
of strong electron-electron interaction is investigated. We consider a tube of
finite length and discuss the effects of the coupling of the electrons to the
deformation potential associated to the acoustic stretching and breathing
modes. Treating the interacting electrons within the framework of the Luttinger
liquid model, the low-energy spectrum of the coupled electron-phonon system is
evaluated. The discreteness of the spectrum is reflected in the differential
conductance which, as a function of the applied bias voltage, exhibits three
distinct families of peaks. The height of the phonon-assisted peaks is very
sensitive to the parameters. The phonon peaks are best observed when the system
is close to the Wentzel-Bardeen singularity.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure
Theory of STM junctions for \pi-conjugated molecules on thin insulating films
A microscopic theory of the transport in a scanning tunnelling microscope
(STM) set-up is introduced for \pi-conjugated molecules on insulating films,
based on the density matrix formalism. A key role is played in the theory by
the energy dependent tunnelling rates which account for the coupling of the
molecule to the tip and to the substrate. In particular, we analyze how the
geometrical differences between the localized tip and extended substrate are
encoded in the tunnelling rate and influence the transport characteristics.
Finally, using benzene as an example of a planar, rotationally symmetric
molecule, we calculate the STM current voltage characteristics and current maps
and analyze them in terms of few relevant angular momentum channels.Comment: 19 pages, 12 figures, minor changes to conform to published versio
Driven Tunneling Dynamics: Bloch-Redfield Theory versus Path Integral Approach
In the regime of weak bath coupling and low temperature we demonstrate
numerically for the spin-boson dynamics the equivalence between two widely used
but seemingly different roads of approximation, namely the path integral
approach and the Bloch-Redfield theory. The excellent agreement between these
two methods is corroborated by a novel efficient analytical high-frequency
approach: it well approximates the decay of quantum coherence via a series of
damped coherent oscillations. Moreover, a suitably tuned control field can
selectively enhance or suppress quantum coherence.Comment: 4 pages including 3 figures, submitted for publicatio
Driving-Induced Symmetry Breaking in the Spin-Boson System
A symmetric dissipative two-state system is asymptotically completely
delocalized independent of the initial state. We show that driving-induced
localization at long times can take place when both the bias and tunneling
coupling energy are harmonically modulated. Dynamical symmetry breaking on
average occurs when the driving frequencies are odd multiples of some reference
frequency. This effect is universal, as it is independent of the dissipative
mechanism. Possible candidates for an experimental observation are flux
tunneling in the variable barrier rf SQUID and magnetization tunneling in
magnetic molecular clusters.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to be published in PR
Phase diffusion as a model for coherent suppression of tunneling in the presence of noise
We study the stabilization of coherent suppression of tunneling in a driven
double-well system subject to random periodic function ``kicks''. We
model dissipation due to this stochastic process as a phase diffusion process
for an effective two-level system and derive a corresponding set of Bloch
equations with phase damping terms that agree with the periodically kicked
system at discrete times. We demonstrate that the ability of noise to localize
the system on either side of the double-well potenital arises from overdamping
of the phase of oscillation and not from any cooperative effect between the
noise and the driving field. The model is investigated with a square wave
drive, which has qualitatively similar features to the widely studied
cosinusoidal drive, but has the additional advantage of allowing one to derive
exact analytic expressions.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Multi-band quantum ratchets
We investigate directed motion in non-adiabatically rocked ratchet systems
sustaining few bands below the barrier. Upon restricting the dynamics to the
lowest M bands, the total system-plus-bath Hamiltonian is mapped onto a
discrete tight-binding model containing all the information both on the intra-
and inter-well tunneling motion. A closed form for the current in the
incoherent tunneling regime is obtained. In effective single-band ratchets, no
current rectification occurs. We apply our theory to describe rectification
effects in vortex quantum ratchets devices. Current reversals upon variation of
the ac-field amplitude or frequency are predicted.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
Drosophila Lethal Giant Larvae Neoplastic Mutant as a Genetic Tool for Cancer Modeling
Drosophila lethal giant larvae (lgl) is a tumour suppressor gene whose function in establishing apical-basal cell polarity as well as in exerting proliferation control in epithelial tissues is conserved between flies and mammals. Individuals bearing lgl null mutations show a gradual loss of tissue architecture and an extended larval life in which cell proliferation never ceases and no differentiation occurs, resulting in prepupal lethality. When tissues from those individuals are transplanted into adult normal recipients, a subset of cells, possibly the cancer stem units, are again able to proliferate and give rise to metastases which migrate to distant sites killing the host. This phenotype closely resembles that of mammalian epithelial cancers, in which loss of cell polarity is one of the hallmarks of a malignant, metastatic behaviour associated with poor prognosis. Lgl protein shares with its human counterpart Human giant larvae-1 (Hugl-1) significant stretches of sequence similarity that we demonstrated to translate into a complete functional conservation, pointing out a role in cell proliferation control and tumorigenesis also for the human homologue. The functional conservation and the power of fly genetics, that allows the researcher to manipulate the fly genome at a level of precision that exceeds that of any other multicellular genetic system, make this Drosophila mutant a very suitable model in which to investigate the mechanisms underlying epithelial tumour formation, progression and metastatisation. In this review, we will summarise the results obtained in these later years using this model for the study of cancer biology. Moreover, we will discuss how recent advances in developmental genetics techniques have succeeded in enhancing the similarities between fly and human tumorigenesis, giving Drosophila a pivotal role in the study of such a complex genetic disease
Creation and manipulation of entanglement in spin chains far from equilibrium
We investigate creation, manipulation, and steering of entanglement in spin
chains from the viewpoint of quantum communication between distant parties. We
demonstrate how global parametric driving of the spin-spin coupling and/or
local time-dependent Zeeman fields produce a large amount of entanglement
between the first and the last spin of the chain. This occurs whenever the
driving frequency meets a resonance condition, identified as "entanglement
resonance". Our approach marks a promising step towards an efficient quantum
state transfer or teleportation in solid state system. Following the reasoning
of Zueco et al. [1], we propose generation and routing of multipartite
entangled states by use of symmetric tree-like structures of spin chains.
Furthermore, we study the effect of decoherence on the resulting spin
entanglement between the corresponding terminal spins.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
The tumor suppressor gene fat modulates the EGFR-mediated proliferation control in the imaginal tissues of Drosophila melanogaster
Molecules involved in cell adhesion can regulate both early signal transduction events, triggered by soluble factors, and downstream events involved in cell cycle progression. Correct integration of these signals allows appropriate cellular growth, differentiation and ultimately tissue morphogenesis, but incorrect interpretation contributes to pathologies such as tumor growth. The Fat cadherin is a tumor suppressor protein required in Drosophila for epithelial morphogenesis, proliferation control and epithelial planar polarization, and its loss results in a hyperplastic growth of imaginal tissues. While several molecular events have been characterized through which fat participates in the establishment of the epithelial planar polarity, little is known about mechanisms underlying fat-mediated control of cell proliferation. Here we provide evidence that fat specifically cooperates with the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) pathway in controlling cell proliferation in developing imaginal epithelia. Hyperplastic larval and adult fat structures indeed undergo an amazing, synergistic enlargement following to EGFR oversignalling. We further show that such a strong functional interaction occurs downstream of MAPK activation through the transcriptional regulation of genes involved in the EGFR nuclear signalling. Considering that fat mutation shows di per se a hyperplastic phenotype, we suggest a model in which fat acts in parallel to EGFR pathway in transducing different cell communication signals: furthermore its function is requested downstream of MAPK for a correct rendering of the growth signals converging to the epidermal growth factor receptor. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved
- …