6,603 research outputs found
Interaction-Induced Spin Polarization in Quantum Dots
The electronic states of lateral many electron quantum dots in high magnetic
fields are analyzed in terms of energy and spin. In a regime with two Landau
levels in the dot, several Coulomb blockade peaks are measured. A zig-zag
pattern is found as it is known from the Fock-Darwin spectrum. However, only
data from Landau level 0 show the typical spin-induced bimodality, whereas
features from Landau level 1 cannot be explained with the Fock-Darwin picture.
Instead, by including the interaction effects within spin-density-functional
theory a good agreement between experiment and theory is obtained. The absence
of bimodality on Landau level 1 is found to be due to strong spin polarization.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Noise enhancement due to quantum coherence in coupled quantum dots
We show that the intriguing observation of noise enhancement in the charge
transport through two vertically coupled quantum dots can be explained by the
interplay of quantum coherence and strong Coulomb blockade. We demonstrate that
this novel mechanism for super-Poissonian charge transfer is very sensitive to
decoherence caused by electron-phonon scattering as inferred from the measured
temperature dependence.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, corrected version (Figs.2 and 3
Mobilities and Scattering Times in Decoupled Graphene Monolayers
Folded single layer graphene forms a system of two decoupled monolayers being
only a few Angstroms apart. Using magnetotransport measurements we investigate
the electronic properties of the two layers conducting in parallel. We show a
method to obtain the mobilities for the individual layers despite them being
jointly contacted. The mobilities in the upper layer are significantly larger
than in the bottom one indicating weaker substrate influence. This is confirmed
by larger transport and quantum scattering times in the top layer. Analyzing
the temperature dependence of the Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations effective
masses and corresponding Fermi velocities are obtained yielding reduced values
down to 66 percent in comparison to monolayers.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Measurement of the energy dependence of phase relaxation by single electron tunneling
Single electron tunneling through a single impurity level is used to probe
the fluctuations of the local density of states in the emitter. The energy
dependence of quasi-particle relaxation in the emitter can be extracted from
the damping of the fluctuations of the local density of states (LDOS). At
larger magnetic fields Zeeman splitting is observed.Comment: 2 pages, 4 figures; 25th International Conference on the Physics of
Semiconductors, Osaka, Japan, September 17-22, 200
Quantitative validation of PEDFLOW for description of unidirectional pedestrian dynamics
The results of a systematic quantitative validation of PEDFLOW based on the
experimental data from FZJ are presented. Unidirectional flow experiments,
totaling 28 different combinations with varying entry, corridor and exit
widths, were considered. The condition imposed on PEDFLOW was that all the
cases should be run with the same input parameters. The exit times and
fundamental diagrams for the measuring region were evaluated and compared. This
validation process led to modifications and enhancements of the model
underlying PEDFLOW. The preliminary conclusions indicate that the results agree
well for densities smaller than 3 m-2 and a good agreement is observed even at
high densities for the corridors with bcor = 2.4 m, and bcor = 3.0 m. For
densities between 1 and 2 m-2 the specific flow and velocities are
underpredicted by PEDFLOW.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, 1 Table, conference PED201
Non-Markovian Dynamics of Charge Carriers in Quantum Dots
We have investigated the dynamics of bound particles in multilevel
current-carrying quantum dots. We look specifically in the regime of resonant
tunnelling transport, where several channels are available for transport.
Through a non-Markovian formalism under the Born approximation, we investigate
the real-time evolution of the confined particles including transport-induced
decoherence and relaxation. In the case of a coherent superposition between
states with different particle number, we find that a Fock-space coherence may
be preserved even in the presence of tunneling into and out of the dot.
Real-time results are presented for various asymmetries of tunneling rates into
different orbitals.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, International Workshop on Physics-Based
Mathematical Models for Low-Dimensional Semiconductor Nanostructures. BIRS,
November 18-23, 200
Tunable graphene system with two decoupled monolayers
The use of two truly two-dimensional gapless semiconductors, monolayer and bilayer graphene, as current-carrying components in field-effect transistors (FET) gives access to new types of nanoelectronic devices. Here, we report on the development of graphene-based FETs containing two decoupled graphene monolayers manufactured from a single one folded during the exfoliation process. The transport characteristics of these newly-developed devices differ markedly from those manufactured from a single-crystal bilayer. By analyzing Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations, we demonstrate the possibility to independently control the carrier densities in both layers using top and bottom gates, despite there being only a nanometer scale separation between them
Signatures of spin in the n=1/3 Fractional Quantum Hall Effect
The activation gap Delta of the fractional quantum Hall state at constant
filling n =1/3 is measured in wide range of perpendicular magnetic field B.
Despite the full spin polarization of the incompressible ground state, we
observe a sharp crossover between a low-field linear dependence of Delta on B
associated to spin texture excitations and a Coulomb-like behavior at large B.
From the global gap-reduction we get information about the mobility edges in
the fractional quantum Hall regime.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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