129 research outputs found
Sub-gap spectroscopy of thermally excited quasiparticles in a Nb contacted carbon nanotube quantum dot
We present electronic transport measurements of a single wall carbon nanotube
quantum dot coupled to Nb superconducting contacts. For temperatures comparable
to the superconducting gap peculiar transport features are observed inside the
Coulomb blockade and superconducting energy gap regions. The observed
temperature dependence can be explained in terms of sequential tunneling
processes involving thermally excited quasiparticles. In particular, these new
channels give rise to two unusual conductance peaks at zero bias in the
vicinity of the charge degeneracy point and allow to determine the degeneracy
of the ground states involved in transport. The measurements are in good
agreement with model calculations.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Thermally induced subgap features in the cotunneling spectroscopy of a carbon nanotube
We report on nonlinear cotunneling spectroscopy of a carbon nanotube quantum
dot coupled to Nb superconducting contacts. Our measurements show rich subgap
features in the stability diagram which become more pronounced as the
temperature is increased. Applying a transport theory based on the
Liouville-von Neumann equation for the density matrix, we show that the
transport properties can be attributed to processes involving sequential as
well as elastic and inelastic cotunneling of quasiparticles thermally excited
across the gap. In particular, we predict thermal replicas of the elastic and
inelastic cotunneling peaks, in agreement with our experimental results.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, submitted to New Journal of Physic
Co-sputtered MoRe thin films for carbon nanotube growth-compatible superconducting coplanar resonators
Molybdenum rhenium alloy thin films can exhibit superconductivity up to
critical temperatures of . At the same time, the films are
highly stable in the high-temperature methane / hydrogen atmosphere typically
required to grow single wall carbon nanotubes. We characterize molybdenum
rhenium alloy films deposited via simultaneous sputtering from two sources,
with respect to their composition as function of sputter parameters and their
electronic dc as well as GHz properties at low temperature. Specific emphasis
is placed on the effect of the carbon nanotube growth conditions on the film.
Superconducting coplanar waveguide resonators are defined lithographically; we
demonstrate that the resonators remain functional when undergoing nanotube
growth conditions, and characterize their properties as function of
temperature. This paves the way for ultra-clean nanotube devices grown in situ
onto superconducting coplanar waveguide circuit elements.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Analysis of Probabilistic Basic Parallel Processes
Basic Parallel Processes (BPPs) are a well-known subclass of Petri Nets. They
are the simplest common model of concurrent programs that allows unbounded
spawning of processes. In the probabilistic version of BPPs, every process
generates other processes according to a probability distribution. We study the
decidability and complexity of fundamental qualitative problems over
probabilistic BPPs -- in particular reachability with probability 1 of
different classes of target sets (e.g. upward-closed sets). Our results concern
both the Markov-chain model, where processes are scheduled randomly, and the
MDP model, where processes are picked by a scheduler.Comment: This is the technical report for a FoSSaCS'14 pape
Spin Effects in a Quantum Ring
Recent experiments are reviewed that explore the spin states of a ring-shaped
many-electron quantum dot. Coulomb-blockade spectroscopy is used to access the
spin degree of freedom. The Zeeman effect observed for states with successive
electron number allows to select possible sequences of spin ground states of
the ring. Spin-paired orbital levels can be identified by probing their
response to magnetic fields normal to the plane of the ring and electric fields
caused by suitable gate voltages. This narrows down the choice of ground-state
spin sequences. A gate-controlled singlet--triplet transition is identified and
the size of the exchange interaction matrix element is determined.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings of the QD2004 conference in Banf
Non-destructive low-temperature contacts to nanoribbon and nanotube quantum dots
Molybdenum disulfide nanoribbons and nanotubes are near-one dimensional
semiconductors with strong spin-orbit interaction, a nanomaterial highly
promising for quantum electronic applications. Here, we demonstrate that a
bismuth semimetal layer between the contact metal and this nanomaterial
strongly improves the properties of the contacts. Two-point resistances on the
order of are observed at room temperature. At cryogenic
temperature, Coulomb blockade is visible. The resulting stability diagrams
indicate a marked absence of trap states at the contacts and the corresponding
disorder, compared to previous devices using low-work function metals as
contacts. Single level quantum transport is observed at temperatures below
100mK.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Single electron-phonon interaction in a suspended quantum dot phonon cavity
An electron-phonon cavity consisting of a quantum dot embedded in a
free-standing GaAs/AlGaAs membrane is characterized in Coulomb blockade
measurements at low temperatures. We find a complete suppression of single
electron tunneling around zero bias leading to the formation of an energy gap
in the transport spectrum. The observed effect is induced by the excitation of
a localized phonon mode confined in the cavity. This phonon blockade of
transport is lifted at magnetic fields where higher electronic states with
nonzero angular momentum are brought into resonance with the phonon energy.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Electrically driven single electron spin resonance in a slanting Zeeman field
The rapidly rising fields of spintronics and quantum information science have
led to a strong interest in developing the ability to coherently manipulate
electron spins. Electron spin resonance (ESR) is a powerful technique to
manipulate spins that is commonly achieved by applying an oscillating magnetic
field. However, the technique has proven very challenging when addressing
individual spins. In contrast, by mixing the spin and charge degrees of freedom
in a controlled way through engineered non-uniform magnetic fields, electron
spin can be manipulated electrically without the need of high-frequency
magnetic fields. Here we realize electrically-driven addressable spin rotations
on two individual electrons by integrating a micron-size ferromagnet to a
double quantum dot device. We find that the electrical control and spin
selectivity is enabled by the micro-magnet's stray magnetic field which can be
tailored to multi-dots architecture. Our results demonstrate the feasibility of
manipulating electron spins electrically in a scalable way.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figure
Homogeneous Gold Catalysis through Relativistic Effects: Addition of Water to Propyne
In the catalytic addition of water to propyne the Au(III) catalyst is not
stable under non-relativistic conditions and dissociates into a Au(I) compound
and Cl2. This implies that one link in the chain of events in the catalytic
cycle is broken and relativity may well be seen as the reason why Au(III)
compounds are effective catalysts.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
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