1,287 research outputs found
Electron-acoustic-phonon scattering and electron relaxation in two-coupled quantum rings
Electron relaxation, induced by acoustic phonons, is studied for coupled
quantum rings in the presence of external fields, both electric and magnetic.
We address the problem of a single electron in vertically coupled GaAs quantum
rings. Electron-phonon interaction is accounted for both deformation potential
and piezoelectric field coupling mechanisms. Depending on the external fields,
the ring radii and the separation between the rings, we show that the two
different couplings have different weights and importance. Significant
oscillations are found in the scattering rates from electron excited states to
the ground state, as a function of either the geometry of the system or the
external fields.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, to appear in Journal of Applied Physic
Inelastic Coulomb scattering rate of a multisubband Q1D electron gas
In this work, the Coulomb scattering lifetimes of electrons in two coupled
quantum wires have been studied by calculating the quasiparticle self-energy
within a multisubband model of quasi-one-dimensional (Q1D) electron system. We
consider two strongly coupled quantum wires with two occupied subbands. The
intrasubband and intersubband inelastic scattering rates are caculated for
electrons in different subbands. Contributions of the intrasubband,
intersubband plasmon excitations, as well as the quasiparticle excitations are
investigated. Our results shows that the plasmon exictations of the first
subband are the most important scattering mechanism for electrons in both
subbands.Comment: 9 pages, REVTEX, 2 figure
Hamiltonian of a many-electron system with single-electron and electron-pair states in a two-dimensional periodic potential
Based on the metastable electron-pair energy band in a two-dimensional (2D)
periodic potential obtained previously by Hai and Castelano [J. Phys.: Condens.
Matter 26, 115502 (2014)], we present in this work a Hamiltonian of many
electrons consisting of single electrons and electron pairs in the 2D system.
The electron-pair states are metastable of energies higher than those of the
single-electron states at low electron density. We assume two different
scenarios for the single-electron band. When it is considered as the lowest
conduction band of a crystal, we compare the obtained Hamiltonian with the
phenomenological model Hamiltonian of a boson-fermion mixture proposed by
Friedberg and Lee [Phys. Rev. B 40, 6745 (1989)]. Single-electron-electron-pair
and electron-pair-electron-pair interaction terms appear in our Hamiltonian and
the interaction potentials can be determined from the electron-electron Coulomb
interactions. When we consider the single-electron band as the highest valence
band of a crystal, we show that holes in this valence band are important for
stabilization of the electron-pair states in the system
Anomalous Rashba spin-orbit interaction in InAs/GaSb quantum wells
We investigate theoretically the Rashba spin-orbit interaction in InAs/GaSb
quantum wells(QWs). We find that the Rashba spin-splitting (RSS) depends
sensitively on the thickness of the InAs layer. The RSS exhibits nonlinear
behavior for narrow InAs/GaSb QWs and the oscillating feature for wide
InAs/GaSb QWs. The nonlinear and oscillating behaviors arise from the weakened
and enhanced interband coupling. The RSS also show asymmetric features respect
to the direction of the external electric field.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures. Appl. Phys. Lett. (in press
Control of the persistent currents in two interacting quantum rings through the Coulomb interaction and inter-ring tunneling
The persistent current in two vertically coupled quantum rings containing few
electrons is studied. We find that the Coulomb interaction between the rings in
the absence of tunneling affects the persistent current in each ring and the
ground state configurations. Quantum tunneling between the rings alters
significantly the ground state and the persistent current in the system.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Carrier relaxation due to electron-electron interaction in coupled double quantum well structures
We calculate the electron-electron interaction induced energy-dependent
inelastic carrier relaxation rate in doped semiconductor coupled double quantum
well nanostructures within the two subband approximation at zero temperature.
In particular, we calculate, using many-body theory, the imaginary part of the
full self-energy matrix by expanding in the dynamically RPA screened Coulomb
interaction, obtaining the intrasubband and intersubband electron relaxation
rates in the ground and excited subbands as a function of electron energy. We
separate out the single particle and the collective excitation contributions,
and comment on the effects of structural asymmetry in the quantum well on the
relaxation rate. Effects of dynamical screening and Fermi statistics are
automatically included in our many body formalism rather than being
incorporated in an ad-hoc manner as one must do in the Boltzman theory.Comment: 26 pages, 5 figure
Levinson's Theorem for the Klein-Gordon Equation in Two Dimensions
The two-dimensional Levinson theorem for the Klein-Gordon equation with a
cylindrically symmetric potential is established. It is shown that
, where denotes
the difference between the number of bound states of the particle
and the ones of antiparticle with a fixed angular momentum , and
the is named phase shifts. The constants and
are introduced to symbol the critical cases where the half bound
states occur at .Comment: Revtex file 14 pages, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Artificial molecular quantum rings: Spin density functional theory calculations
The ground states of artificial molecules made of two vertically coupled
quantum rings are studied within the spin density functional theory for systems
containing up to 13 electrons. Quantum tunneling effects on the electronic
structure of the coupled rings are analyzed. For small ring radius, our results
recover those of coupled quantum dots. For intermediate and large ring radius,
new phases are found showing the formation of new diatomic artificial ring
molecules. Our results also show that the tunneling induced phase transitions
in the coupled rings occur at much smaller tunneling energy as compared to
those for coupled quantum dot systems.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
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