1,338 research outputs found
Josephson effect in mesoscopic graphene strips with finite width
We study Josephson effect in a ballistic graphene strip of length smaller
than the superconducting coherence length and arbitrary width . We find that
the dependence of the critical supercurrent on is drastically
different for different types of the edges. For \textit{smooth} and
\textit{armchair} edges at low concentration of the carriers decreases
monotonically with decreasing and tends to a constant minimum for a
narrow strip . The minimum supercurrent is zero for smooth edges
but has a finite value for the armchair edges. At higher
concentration of the carriers, in addition to this overall monotonic variation,
the critical current undergoes a series of peaks with varying . On the other
hand in a strip with \textit{zigzag} edges the supercurrent is half-integer
quantized to , showing a step-wise variation with
.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Electron-electron interactions in antidot-based Aharonov-Bohm interferometers
We present a microscopic picture of quantum transport in quantum antidots in
the quantum Hall regime taking electron interactions into account. We discuss
the edge state structure, energy level evolution, charge quantization and
linear-response conductance as the magnetic field or gate voltage is varied.
Particular attention is given to the conductance oscillations due to
Aharonov-Bohm interference and their unexpected periodicity. To explain the
latter we propose the mechanisms of scattering by point defects and Coulomb
blockade tunneling. They are supported by self-consistent calculations in the
Hartree approximation, which indicate pinning and correlation of the
single-particle states at the Fermi energy as well as charge oscillation when
antidot-bound states depopulate. We have also found interesting phenomena of
anti-resonance reflection of the Fano type.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Transport and magnetization dynamics in a superconductor/single-molecule magnet/superconductor junction
We study dc-transport and magnetization dynamics in a junction of arbitrary
transparency consisting of two spin-singlet superconducting leads connected via
a single classical spin precessing at the frequency . The presence of
the spin in the junction provides different transmission amplitudes for spin-up
and spin-down quasiparticles as well as a time-dependent spin-flip transmission
term. For a phase biased junction, we show that a steady-state superconducting
charge current flows through the junction and that an out-of-equilibrium
circularly polarized spin current, of frequency , is emitted in the
leads. Detailed understanding of the charge and spin currents is obtained in
the entire parameter range. In the adiabatic regime,
where is the superconducting gap, and for high transparencies of the
junction, a strong suppression of the current takes place around \vp \approx
0 due to an abrupt change in the occupation of the Andreev bound-states. At
higher values of the phase and/or precession frequency, extended
(quasi-particle like) states compete with the bound-states in order to carry
the current. Well below the superconducting transition, these results are shown
to be weakly affected by the back-action of the spin current on the dynamics of
the precessing spin. Indeed, we show that the Gilbert damping due to the
quasi-particle spin current is strongly suppressed at low-temperatures, which
goes along with a shift of the precession frequency due to the condensate. The
results obtained may be of interest for on-going experiments in the field of
molecular spintronics.Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures (v3) Minor modifications per referee's comments.
No change in results. (v2) 2 authors added, 1 reference added (Ref. 25), no
change in the text and result
Transport Processes in Metal-Insulator Granular Layers
Tunnel transport processes are considered in a square lattice of metallic
nanogranules embedded into insulating host to model tunnel conduction in real
metal/insulator granular layers. Based on a simple model with three possible
charging states (, or 0) of a granule and three kinetic processes
(creation or recombination of a pair, and charge transfer) between
neighbor granules, the mean-field kinetic theory is developed. It describes the
interplay between charging energy and temperature and between the applied
electric field and the Coulomb fields by the non-compensated charge density.
The resulting charge and current distributions are found to be essentially
different in the free area (FA), between the metallic contacts, or in the
contact areas (CA), beneath those contacts. Thus, the steady state dc transport
is only compatible with zero charge density and ohmic resistivity in FA, but
charge accumulation and non-ohmic behavior are \emph{necessary} for conduction
over CA. The approximate analytic solutions are obtained for characteristic
regimes (low or high charge density) of such conduction. The comparison is done
with the measurement data on tunnel transport in related experimental systems.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, 1 reference corrected, acknowlegments adde
Topological confinement in bilayer graphene
We study a new type of one-dimensional chiral states that can be created in
bilayer graphene (BLG) by electrostatic lateral confinement. These states
appear on the domain walls separating insulating regions experiencing the
opposite gating polarity. While the states are similar to conventional
solitonic zero-modes, their properties are defined by the unusual chiral BLG
quasiparticles, from which they derive. The number of zero-mode branches is
fixed by the topological vacuum charge of the insulating BLG state. We discuss
how these chiral states can manifest experimentally, and emphasize their
relevance for valleytronics.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Dynamical Coulomb Blockade and the Derivative Discontinuity of Time-Dependent Density Functional Theory
The role of the discontinuity of the exchange-correlation potential of
density functional theory is studied in the context of electron transport and
shown to be intimately related to Coulomb blockade. By following the time
evolution of an interacting nanojunction attached to biased leads, we find
that, instead of evolving to a steady state, the system reaches a dynamical
state characterized by correlation-induced current oscillations. Our results
establish a dynamical picture of Coulomb blockade manifesting itself as a
periodic sequence of charging and discharging of the nanostructure.Comment: to appear in Physical Review Letter
Josephson current noise above Tc in superconducting tunnel junctions
Tunnel junction between two superconductors is considered in the vicinity of
the critical temperature. Superconductive fluctuations above Tc give rise to
the noise of the ac Josephson current although the current itself is zero in
average. As a result of fluctuations, current noise spectrum is peaked at the
Josephson frequency, which may be considered as precursor of superconductivity
in the normal state. Temperature dependence and shape of the Josephson current
noise resonance line is calculated for various junction configurations.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
Advances in point-contact spectroscopy: two-band superconductor MgB2 (A review)
Analysis of the point-contact spectroscopy (PCS) data on the new dramatic
high-T superconductor MgB reveals quite different behavior of two
disconnected and electronic bands, deriving from their
anisotropy, different dimensionality, and electron-phonon interaction. PCS
allows direct registration of both the superconducting gaps and
electron-phonon-interaction spectral function of the two-dimensional
and three-dimensional band, establishing correlation between the gap
value and intensity of the high-T driving force -- the boron
vibration mode. PCS data on some nonsuperconducting transition-metal diborides
are surveyed for comparison.Comment: 17 pages, 30 figs., will be published in Low Temp. Phys. V.30 (2004)
N
Spectroscopy of phonons and spin torques in magnetic point contacts
Phonon spectroscopy is used to investigate the mechanism of current-induced
spin torques in nonmagnetic/ferromagnetic (N/F) point contacts. Magnetization
excitations observed in the magneto-conductance of the point contacts are
pronounced for diffusive and thermal contacts, where the electrons experience
significant scattering in the contact region. We find no magnetic excitations
in highly ballistic contacts. Our results show that impurity scattering at the
N/F interface is the origin of the new single-interface spin torque effect.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figs., accepted for publication in PR
On the Selfconsistent Theory of Josephson Effect in Ballistic Superconducting Microconstrictions
The microscopic theory of current carrying states in the ballistic
superconducting microchannel is presented. The effects of the contact length L
on the Josephson current are investigated. For the temperatures T close to the
critical temperature T_c the problem is treated selfconsistently, with taking
into account the distribution of the order parameter inside the
contact. The closed integral equation for in strongly inhomogeneous
microcontact geometry ( is the coherence length at
T=0) replaces the differential Ginzburg-Landau equation. The critical current
is expressed in terms of solution of this integral equation. The
limiting cases of and are considered. With
increasing length L the critical current decreases, although the ballistic
Sharvin resistance of the contact remains the same as at L=0. For ultra short
channels with ( is
the Debye frequency) the corrections to the value of critical current I_c(L=0)
are sensitive to the strong coupling effects.Comment: 15 pages LaTex, 3 jpg figure
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