40 research outputs found

    Mechanically induced current and quantum evaporation from Luttinger liquids

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    We investigate transport through a tunnelling junction between an uncorrelated metallic lead and a Luttinger liquid when the latter is subjected to a time dependent perturbation. The tunnelling current as well as the electron energy distribution function are found to be strongly affected by the perturbation due to generation of harmonics in the density oscillations. Using a semiconducting lead instead of a metallic one results in electrons being injected into the lead even without applied voltage. Some applications to carbon nanotubes are discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures (eps files

    Resonant tunnelling in interacting 1D systems with an AC modulated gate

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    We present an analysis of transport properties of a system consisting of two half-infinite interacting one-dimensional wires connected to a single fermionic site, the energy of which is subject to a periodic time modulation. Using the properties of the exactly solvable Toulouse point we derive an integral equation for the localised level Keldysh Green's function which governs the behaviour of the linear conductance. We investigate this equation numerically and analytically in various limits. The period-averaged conductance G displays a surprisingly rich behaviour depending on the parameters of the system. The most prominent feature is the emergence of an intermediate temperature regime at low frequencies, where G is proportional to the line width of the respective static conductance saturating at a non-universal frequency dependent value at lower temperatures.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures (eps files

    Random Mass Dirac Fermions in Doped Spin-Peierls and Spin-Ladder systems: One-Particle Properties and Boundary Effects

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    Quasi-one-dimensional spin-Peierls and spin-ladder systems are characterized by a gap in the spin-excitation spectrum, which can be modeled at low energies by that of Dirac fermions with a mass. In the presence of disorder these systems can still be described by a Dirac fermion model, but with a random mass. Some peculiar properties, like the Dyson singularity in the density of states, are well known and attributed to creation of low-energy states due to the disorder. We take one step further and study single-particle correlations by means of Berezinskii's diagram technique. We find that, at low energy ϵ\epsilon, the single-particle Green function decays in real space like G(x,ϵ)(1/x)3/2G(x,\epsilon) \propto (1/x)^{3/2}. It follows that at these energies the correlations in the disordered system are strong -- even stronger than in the pure system without the gap. Additionally, we study the effects of boundaries on the local density of states. We find that the latter is logarithmically (in the energy) enhanced close to the boundary. This enhancement decays into the bulk as 1/x1/\sqrt{x} and the density of states saturates to its bulk value on the scale Lϵln2(1/ϵ)L_\epsilon \propto \ln^2 (1/\epsilon). This scale is different from the Thouless localization length λϵln(1/ϵ)\lambda_\epsilon\propto\ln (1/\epsilon). We also discuss some implications of these results for the spin systems and their relation to the investigations based on real-space renormalization group approach.Comment: 26 pages, LaTex, 9 PS figures include

    Gapped spin liquid states in a one-dimensional Hubbard model with antiferromagnetic exchange interaction

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    We study the phase diagram of a one-dimensional extended Hubbard model with antiferromagnetic exchange interaction analytically and numerically. The bosonization and transfer-matrix renormalization group methods are used in the corresponding coupling regimes. At half-filling, the system is a Mott insulator with a finite spin excitation gap if the on-site Coulomb repulsion is fairly smaller than the antiferromagnetic exchange J. This Mott-insulator is characterized by the bond-charge-density-wave order or spontaneously dimerization. In the weak-coupling regime where the spin-charge separation holds approximately, the critical point separating the gapless and gapped spin liquid phases is U_c\sim J/2. However, as J increases, the spin-charge couplings become important and the critical point U_c is significantly suppressed and eventually tends to zero as J\to \infty. Away from half-filling, the charge gap completely collapses but the spin gap persists.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, to appear in PR

    Intrinsic Coulomb blockade in multi-wall carbon nanotubes

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    Carbon nanotubes provide a new class of molecular wires that display new and exciting mesoscopic transport properties. We provide a detailed theoretical description for transport in multi-wall nanotubes, where both disorder and strong interactions are important. The interplay of both aspects leads to a particularly effective intrinsic Coulomb blockade for tunneling. The relation to recent experiments is discussed.Comment: 13 pages, incl 2 figs, for: Special issue "Transport in Molecular Wires" in Chemical Physics, ed. by P. Hanggi, M. Ratner, S. Yalirak

    Critical properties of the double-frequency sine-Gordon model with applications

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    We study the properties of the double-frequency sine--Gordon model in the vicinity of the Ising quantum phase transition displayed by this model. Using a mapping onto a generalised lattice quantum Ashkin-Teller model, we obtain critical and nearly-off-critical correlation functions of various operators. We discuss applications of the double-sine-Gordon model to one-dimensional physical systems, like spin chains in a staggered external field and interacting electrons in a staggered potential.Comment: 51 pages, Latex fil

    The fate of spinons in spontaneously dimerised spin-1/2 ladders

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    We study a weakly coupled, frustrated two-leg spin-1/2 Heisenberg ladder. For vanishing coupling between the chains, elementary excitations are deconfined, gapless spin-1/2 objects called spinons. We investigate the fate of spinons for the case of a weak interchain interaction. We show that despite a drastic change in ground state, which becomes spontaneously dimerised, spinons survive as elementary excitations but acquire a spectral gap. We furthermore determine the exact dynamical structure factor for several values of momentum transfer.Comment: 8 pages of revtex, 7 figures; discussion of physical picture for ground state and excitations in the "twistless" ladder expanded, version to appear in Phys Rev

    Exactly Solvable Ginzburg-Landau theories of Superconducting Order Parameters coupled to Elastic Modes

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    We consider two families of exactly solvable models describing thermal fluctuations in two-dimensional superconductors coupled to phonons living in an insulating layer, and study the stability of the superconducting state with respect to vortices. The two families are characterized by one or two superconducting planes. The results suggest that the effective critical temperature increases with the thickness of the insulating layer. Also the presence of the additional superconducting layer has the same effect.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review

    Persistent currents in mesoscopic rings with a quantum dot

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    Using the Anderson model in the Kondo regime, we calculate the persistent current j in a ring with an embedded quantum dot (QD) as a function of the Aharonov-Bohm flux Phi for different ring length L, temperature T and broadening of the conduction states delta . For T=delta =0 and L >> xi, where xi is the Kondo screening length, Lj tends to the value for a non interacting ideal ring, while it is suppressed for a side coupled QD. For any L/xi, Lj is also suppressed when either T or delta increase above a fraction of the level spacing which depends on Phi.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. B, (Refs. added

    Interacting one dimensional electron gas with open boundaries

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    We discuss the properties of interacting electrons on a finite chain with open boundary conditions. We extend the Haldane Luttinger liquid description to these systems and study how the presence of the boundaries modifies various correlation functions. In view of possible experimental applications to quantum wires, we analyse how tunneling measurements can reveal the underlying Luttinger liquid properties. The two terminal conductance is calculated. We also point out possible applications to quasi one dimensional materials and study the effects of magnetic impurities.Comment: 38 pages, ReVTeX, 7 figures (available upon request
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